Hi

If you watch the “jump” process. The thing that inevitably is being added or 
subtracted is a long path 
sat. For timing those are the worst of the bunch. Unless you have a way to 
fully correct the ionosphere 
(really good data or a multi band receiver) they will always be contributing an 
error. This is where the common
advice “crank up the minimum elevation angle” comes from. Since it degrades 
survey performance, you 
can’t do it blindly. If you …ummm … errrr …. have a computer program to work 
out the angle that always 
gives you 5 sats in view, you probably could come up with a pretty good number.

Bob


> On Dec 4, 2016, at 12:53 PM, Mark Sims <hol...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> 
> The Trimble timing receivers have a "single satellite" operating mode that 
> says to only use the highest elevation satellite that it sees (or you can set 
> a specific single satellite to track).   It would be interesting to see how 
> the performance compares to its standard "overdetermined clock" mode.  It 
> might help in situations where you have a poor sky view.  
> 
> The Trimble devices tend to jump around quite a bit whenever the tracked 
> satellites it is using changes.  Having an accurate position helps minimize 
> the jumps.
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