Dear Joe,

Joseph Gray wrote:
Does anyone know if any of those all-in-one hockey puck GPS receivers
put out PPS on the serial cable? The type that has the antenna and GPS
together, with a serial cable hanging off of it. I'm thinking about
using one for a timing project. The more sensitive, the better, as it
will be used indoors.

While I'm on the subject of GPS units, a question comes to mind. I
know that WAAS enhances position accuracy. Does it do anything for
time? My first thought would be no, as that comes directly from the
standard GPS satellites.

It does. It improves the GPS position in [XYZT]. However, it does not work its magic in a direct sense to time itself. The fast corrections adjust the pseudo-range measures comming out the channels. Ionspheric errors is also corrected by transmitting grid-based data and the receiver interpolates the correction value for its (coarse) location and make individual corrections. SBAS (WAAS is one of several SBAS systems) also corrects for satellite orbit parameters, and UTC offsets.

These corrections all aids to improve the GPS position in [XYZT] where the improvement in T is for most users a side-effect. A GPS with fixed position can (if the receiver supports time-only mode) get a quicker and more accurate fix (modulus local multipath) and then produce more accurate time value as the SBAS aiding reduces the biasing errors and fluctuations of those. Using a LBAS broadcast could improve the state further.

Dip your nose into the Kaplan & Hegarty book for instance. That is what I used to reinforce my recollection of things. There are better sources.

Cheers,
Magnus

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