Hi Magnus, Try as I might, the weather and the local power company had other ideas about my long term capture. I'm running everything but the 5370 from a UPS. I guess I'm going to have to get batteries for my other UPS and run the 5370 from that. A one second power loss was all it took to stop the test.
Anyway, I did manage to get 376,238 points of data. The data is captured on a 5370A. The external clock input and the STOP channel are fed by the 10MHz from my PRS-45A. The START channel is fed by the 10MHz from one of my GPSDOs. The EXT channel is fed by the 1PPS from another of my GPSDO units. "EXT ARM" is enabled. So, essentially, at every 1PPS pulse, the phase difference between the two 10MHz feeds is captured. I've attached a screenshot of the phase plot which can also be found here:http://evoria.net/AE6RV/Timelab/Screenshot.png I've also made the timelab file (compressed by 7z) available here: http://evoria.net/AE6RV/Timelab/GFSvsCS.4.22.17.7z So, back to my question: Where are the large ionospheric phase moves? This question has been causing me doubt since I started on this project. Or don't I still have enough data collected for this to happen? Bob ----------------------------------------------------------------- AE6RV.com GFS GPSDO list: groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/GFS-GPSDOs/info From: Magnus Danielson <[email protected]> To: Bob Stewart <[email protected]>; Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement <[email protected]> Cc: [email protected] Sent: Tuesday, April 18, 2017 1:09 AM Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Three-cornered hat on timelab? Hi Bob, That is a good solution indeed. Good luck with that measurement run! One of the fun stuff with Timelab is that you can walk by and check the developments. I've found that very useful for long measurements (as in hours and days). I prepared a cesium for one vendor, and initially they did not care so much, but then they saw more deviations between the receivers, so they wanted to sort it out, but discovered that they could not cancel out the common mode of GPS signals (and its shifts), so then firing up that cesium was the right thing. I remember writing support emails while waiting for the airplane in Madrid airport, happy that they was doing a first run for the right measurement reason. :) Cheers, Magnus On 04/18/2017 04:25 AM, Bob Stewart wrote: > Hi Magnus, > Today I started a long run against my PRS-45A. Maybe this time I won't have > a power outage. I'll see what it tells me in a few days. > Bob
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