Dave check with the Triniity House web site they are the sponsors of the Anthorn slave site, the master station is at Lessay on the St. Malo penninsular so should be strong. There is (or was) a full descrition of the "option to GPS"on the website. I believe there should be at least 5 years to run on the original 10 year contract. The transmission is eLoran, at bit like Loran-C with a "DGPS". I think there is an extra pulse in the train, I dont think this will affect the receiver you quote. The 100kHz signal should be OK in daytime may will suffer some phase shifts at night at more extreme range. This should not be a problem at your range from Lessay.

Alan
G3NYK

----- Original Message ----- From: "Dr. David Kirkby (Kirkby Microwave Ltd)" <drkir...@kirkbymicrowave.co.uk> To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" <time-nuts@febo.com>
Sent: Friday, July 10, 2015 1:14 PM
Subject: [time-nuts] LORAN-C reception in the UK


How good/bad would a LORAN-C frequency reference such as the Stanford
Research FS700 work in the UK?  I live about 60 km to the east of central
London.

Is there any future for LORAN-C in the UK?

I am looking for a frequency reference that is not GPS - I already have a
GPS frequency reference but would like to compare it with something
independent of GPS.  Just having two GPS receivers provides two signals
which are probably highly correlated.

Dave.
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