The Skylab is effectively useless for sub-second timing.  The message arrival 
time periodically jumps around,  up to +/- 300 msecs.  There are a couple of 
values that it seems to prefer, but any value can be seen.



NMEA works a lot better on most receivers that I expected.   They send several 
messages a second (and depending upon the receiver the time can appear in more 
than one message... Heather has a hierarchy of preferences for which message to 
get the time from if it sees it in more than one message.   By sending all 
those (rather long) messages each second, one might expect quite a bit of 
variation in time message arrival, but this does not appear to be the case 
(except for the Skylab).  It is also interesting that most NMEA receivers have 
their time message come out around 300 msecs +/- 100 msecs.  For a generic NMEA 
receiver, Heather uses a default correction value of -300 msecs.



-----------------------


> There is the Skylab SKM53 at 37.8 ms. I've never seen one of those, so no 
> guess about that one.

The surprise in the crowd is the Res-T SMT at 63.7 ms. I wonder what they messed
up
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