Lady Heather depends upon the ability of the Thunderbolt to broadcast the time
message automatically every second. Apparently the Palisade type units do not
support this mode of operation. It might be possible to set up the software
so that it requests the time message continuously and
Pete
Yes indeed it is cut halfway up on the bottom side it slices to the right.
No idea if it would have an effect
Fact that it would not work with Lady heather certainly makes it
un-exciting.
Regards
Paul.
On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 1:47 AM, Peter Bell bell.pe...@gmail.com wrote:
Most of the
measurement time-nuts@febo.com
Sent: Monday, 19 December 2011, 6:47
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Another Trimble Thunderbolt-like GPS?
Most of the parts (and their grouping) seem the same as the NTPX26AB -
which based on my quick play with one seems to have basically the same
hardware as a Thunderbolt
December 2011 04:41
To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
Subject: [time-nuts] Another Trimble Thunderbolt-like GPS?
There are some Trimble GPS receivers on eBay. They say 10Mhz 1pps
but they are not Thunderbolts. These are an A4 sized PCB, no enclosure.
The seller says it takes
-nuts] Another Trimble Thunderbolt-like GPS?
There are some Trimble GPS receivers on eBay. They say 10Mhz 1pps
but they are not Thunderbolts. These are an A4 sized PCB, no enclosure.
The seller says it takes 48VDC to run. Seems reasonable as there is a large
DC/DC power converter in the board
It's not paranoia if it's true! :-)
Take a look at the pictures for # 270725678037 . These boards don't
have the connector cut off of the corner of the board. Good eyes.
Ed
On 12/19/2011 12:47 AM, Peter Bell wrote:
Most of the parts (and their grouping) seem the same as the NTPX26AB -
Connectors cut off so it can not be used in its original application?
Bert Kehren
In a message dated 12/19/2011 10:55:31 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,
ed_pal...@sasktel.net writes:
It's not paranoia if it's true! :-)
Take a look at the pictures for # 270725678037 . These boards don't
have
That would make sense - when I was using one of the original Palisade
units I remember that once it was tracking it only output the time
packet every 150 seconds - which seemed rather strange for something
that was being sold as a timing device. You could set it up to output
a time packet with
That's well spotted - and it also reveals that this board _doesn't_
have a PPS output - it has a CDMA style PP2S output driven on each
even second. It's also got a 8xChip (9.8304 MHz) output - but I doubt
that is useful to anyone outside a CDMA context.
So it looks like it's useful for a 10MHz
I see fluke.i selling older GPSDOs consisting of a large board with the guts
(more or less) of a Thunderbolt, a smaller board with switches and
indicators,
and a ribbon cable to connect them.
With a FW of 1.88 and date code a few years older than a Thunderbolt,
I would guess this was a
Seems unlikely. They were probably scrapped rather than resold because
the original application is obsolete. Also, it would be a significant
job to take the module apart so that you could cut off the connector so
neatly. There are easier and faster ways to prevent reuse. Maybe the
Is there some industry standard on the data format these time standards use?
For instance, the thunderbolt software and Lady Heather work fine with my
Starloc.
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Sent: Monday, 19 December 2011, 10:30
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Another Trimble Thunderbolt-like GPS?
Don't recognise it.
Obviously a telecoms system of some sort as -48VDC. From a Google search of
the Trimble P/N I get some Chinese sites which you can glean something about
an ultra stable 10 MHz
On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 4:21 AM, Mark Sims hol...@hotmail.com wrote:
Lady Heather depends upon the ability of the Thunderbolt to broadcast the
time message automatically every second. Apparently the Palisade type units
do not support this mode of operation. It might be possible to set
Kimberley
-Original Message-
From: time-nuts-boun...@febo.com [mailto:time-nuts-boun...@febo.com] On
Behalf Of li...@lazygranch.com
Sent: 19 December 2011 17:25
To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Another Trimble Thunderbolt-like GPS
ed_pal...@sasktel.net
To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement time-nuts@febo.com
Sent: Monday, December 19, 2011 9:16:32 AM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Another Trimble Thunderbolt-like GPS?
It's not paranoia if it's true! :-)
Take a look at the pictures for # 270725678037
On Dec 19, 2011, at 11:59 AM, Chris Albertson wrote:
Where is the source code for Lady Heather?
It's included with the binary distribution.
Kevin
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On 19 Dec, 2011, at 11:25 , Rob Kimberley wrote:
There was a spec issued many years ago to the industry from Lucent I believe
to come up with a GPS product for base station requirements. 10 MHz, 1PPS,
OCXO, RS-232 port, and a certain holdover spec. The Thunderbolt was one,
Starloc another,
19, 2011 9:16:32 AM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Another Trimble Thunderbolt-like GPS?
It's not paranoia if it's true! :-)
Take a look at the pictures for # 270725678037 . These boards don't
have the connector cut off of the corner of the board. Good eyes.
Ed
On 12/19/2011 12:47 AM, Peter Bell
To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurementtime-nuts@febo.com
Reply-To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
time-nuts@febo.com
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Another Trimble Thunderbolt-like GPS?
On 19 Dec, 2011, at 11:25 , Rob Kimberley wrote:
There was a spec issued
-nuts@febo.com
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Another Trimble Thunderbolt-like GPS?
On 19 Dec, 2011, at 11:25 , Rob Kimberley wrote:
There was a spec issued many years ago to the industry from Lucent I believe
to come up with a GPS product for base station requirements. 10 MHz, 1PPS,
OCXO, RS
There are some Trimble GPS receivers on eBay. They say 10Mhz 1pps
but they are not Thunderbolts. These are an A4 sized PCB, no
enclosure. The seller says it takes 48VDC to run. Seems reasonable
as there is a large DC/DC power converter in the board.
Anyone know more? How to they compare to
Most of the parts (and their grouping) seem the same as the NTPX26AB -
which based on my quick play with one seems to have basically the same
hardware as a Thunderbolt. The only strange thing I noticed was that
although it would work with the Trimble tbolt software Lady Heather
couldn't recognize
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