So the ultimate question is: Do you need a F9P  in order to find the precise 
position of your F9T Antenna so that you can set up the F9T or is the F9T’s 
survey mode as accurate ( I doubt it as the doc gives position accuracy 2m ). 
Come to think of it, do you need three positioning receivers to be sure of your 
position? and three P9Ts so that you can use differential mode for best timing 
accuracy. I see no on board quantization error correction mentioned, nor 
quantization error reporting though I expect that is there, so for best 
accurracy that has to be added.  This looks as though it could get expensive.


> Le 24 janv. 2019 à 07:30, Dustin Marquess <[email protected]> a écrit :
> 
> This looks ideal to me:
> 
> https://www.u-blox.com/sites/default/files/RCB-F9T_ProductSummary_%28UBX-18069985%29.pdf
> 
> -Dustin
> 
> On Wed, Jan 23, 2019 at 8:01 PM Angus via time-nuts
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> Hi,
>> 
>> It doesn't look like the F9P does anything special for timing - the
>> timing specs given in the F9T spec sheet are 5 ns (1-sigma, clear sky,
>> absolute mode) and +/- 4ns jitter, but for the F9P are 30ns RMS and
>> 60ns for 99%.
>> 
>> I think I want an F9T :)
>> 

In the year 1000 CE, the Persian Muslim scholar al-Biruni first used the term 
second in Arabic and defined it as 1⁄86,400 (that is, 1/(24 × 60 × 60)) of a 
mean solar day.


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