Le 17/10/2010 11:55, David McClain a écrit :
I just received my LPRO-101 with a GPSDO control on it, from
TenMhz.com. After fiddling with getting a good placement for the GPS
antenna, so that it doesn't keep losing the satellites, I have been
attempting to discipline the oscillator for more than 24 hours.
At this point, the LED has been toggling red / green for the past 24
hours which indicates solid GPS acquisition and < 5e-8. But it isn't
locked to NIST until it turns solid green which indicates < 5e-11.
Since this is a first deployment at my location, is it reasonable
behavior for it to take longer than 24 hours to lock to NIST through
GPS? Or do you think something may be wrong with the device.
I don't have this box or an LPRO, but if the manafacturer says 24hrs is
OK, then I guess that should be enough. You may need to give them a
call. However am wondering if you are getting reflected path GPS
signals. You said that you had to fiddle with the antenna placement.
Are you in an urban jungle? I have a situation where I can see
satellites at all times, but once or twice a day I am getting strong
reflected signal which is disturbing the GPS 1PPS. It is due to buidings
opposite my north facing office where the antenna sits. The issue is
seen with my TBOLT, Z3801A and independent Oncore GPS engines all of
which are not the latest hardware. That would cause the PLL to be
constantly chasing a moving target.
I already know by comparison to WWV that I'm within a few mHz of being
aligned, but noise in the measurements, human impatience, and wander
in the soundcard clock, prevents me knowing any better than this. So
already I'm < 5e-10. But that's about all I know until I see it lock.
(If it ever does...)
eh?
Dr. David McClain
Chief Technical Officer
Refined Audiometrics Laboratory
4391 N. Camino Ferreo
Tucson, AZ 85750
email: d...@refined-audiometrics.com
phone: 1.520.390.3995
web: http://refined-audiometrics.com
On Oct 15, 2010, at 16:00, Magnus Danielson wrote:
On 10/16/2010 12:08 AM, Bob Camp wrote:
Hi
It's a crazy world when it comes to self signed certs.
You have at least 5 OS's you need to consider (MS, Linux/FBSD, OS-X,
I-OS, Android). You need to think about both browsers and mail
clients. Each of those come from a half dozen sources on each
platform. Then you have configuration options on each. That's a lot
of combinations.
Each combo seems to have a different idea of what not to do when
they see a self signed cert. If you want to be able to handle all of
them, even "real" certs may have issues. There are indeed several
common combo's that are a major pain with a self signed cert.
No, I didn't write any of the code with the problems in it. I also
don't want to get into the details of what and where. This really
isn't the forum for that sort of thing. I'm not out to bash any
particular solution, only to point out that there are indeed issues.
Do handle part of the mess, we have setup our local root cert at the
computer club, and then sign our server certs to that. I did a major
overhaul on the infrastructure for that. It is still not "real"
safety routines, but ah well. We provide a cert download which
quickly solves the cert issue with most browser.
Seems to work for our myriad of server and client OSes and clients.
There is various ways to get "real" root certs, but depending on
degree of uhm... safety... it may be argued of their capabilities.
There is efforts to build a chain of trust for a stable free root
cert, but it is so far nog included in any major browsers.
Essentially it's a mess. I'm only scratched the surface here.
Cheers,
Magnus
_______________________________________________
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to
https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
_______________________________________________
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to
https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
_______________________________________________
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.