Yes, that is the sawtooth correction parameter.  If a receiver reports the 
sawtooth correction value, but not a GPSDO EFC dac setting,  Heather plots the 
sawtooth value as the GD plot and shows it where the DAC value is normally 
shown.

Sawtooth values are seldom simple ramps.   They represent the difference 
between the GPS PPS signal and (usually) the GPS CPU clock.   They have all 
sorts of interesting structure to them (like the infamous "hanging bridges") 
The magnitude of the sawtooth range depends upon the GPS CPU.  Older devices 
may have a +/- 30 ns range and newer ones like the Venus timing receivers are 
in the +/- 6 ns range.

A GPSDO usually derives its PPS output by dividing the 10 MHz OCXO output down. 
  The GPSDO control loop removes the sawtooth error.   A good GPSDO takes 
advantage of the sawtooth correction message from the receiver to minimize the 
effects of the sawtooth error on  the control loop.   The Thunderbolt locks the 
GPS receiver clocks to the 10 MHz OCXO and does not have any sawtooth error to 
compensate for.

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

> Mark Sims, can you comment on the SawT parameter, I assumed being reported by 
> the M12 GPS, displayed on Lady Heather?
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