Hi Bob,

You only need a survey if your timing receiver is running in zero-D mode. If 
you move the antenna more than some practical threshold you should adjust the 
fixed position or maybe just do another survey.

If you plan to move a lot, or if your application is mobile, or are on a 
slippery slope, or you just don't want to bother with a time-consuming survey, 
then run the timing receiver in 3D mode. As I said it will perform "almost as 
well". If you normally get, say 9 SV, I predict the timing accuracy difference 
is maybe only 10 or 20%.

You're still building a homebrew GPSDO, right? Collect a day of performance 
data in 0-D and then a day in 3-D and see what difference there is in RMS 
timing residuals (or in ADEV). I wonder if your GPSDO can even measure the 
difference.

/tvb

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Bob Stewart" <[email protected]>
To: "Discussion of Precise Time and Frequency Measurement" <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2015 11:09 AM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Terrestrial Tides and Land Movement


Tom said: "The nice thing about GPS, unlike other time transfer methods, is 
that can handle the case of a moving antenna. As the antenna moves so does the 
time. This is why GPS timing receivers work (almost as well) on top of your car 
as on top of your house."
I don't get that. What's the purpose of doing a survey when you move your 
antenna if this the case?
Bob

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