Hi Mike,
My unit has the standard 6 channel VP. In fact, here's the ID message:
COPYRIGHT 1991-1995 MOTOROLA INC.
SFTW P/N # 98-P39972M
SOFTWARE VER # 8
SOFTWARE REV # 4
SOFTWARE DATE 13 JUL 1995
MODEL #B1121P1114
HDWR P/N # _
SERIAL # SSG0239632
MANUFACTUR DATE 7H18
OPTIONS LISTIB
On 11/6/2012 2:59 PM, Ed Palmer wrote:
But if this is a firmware issue, shouldn't there be lots of Z3801As with
this problem? I suspect that there's a fault with my unit, but I can't
imagine what.
Does your unit by chance have an 8 channel Oncore VP instead of the
stock 6 channel one?
Also,
When I look at the data that the VP is sending to the Z3801A, all I see
are the Ba, Bb, and Bn commands. I don't know if any of those have
enough low level information to play with.
But if this is a firmware issue, shouldn't there be lots of Z3801As with
this problem? I suspect that there's
In message <4b56b3dacedd407cbbec4138a519e...@vectron.com>, "Bob Camp" writes:
>Hi
>
>At least some of the Motorola receivers passed across per satellite timing
>information. That would allow you to play with what you used or didn't use
>in the firmware.
See also:
http://phk.freebs
> What can the firmware do if it decides that it doesn't like a satellite? The
> GPS receiver does the math and sends over the PPS. How would the firmware
> adjust that calculation to not use a particular satellite?
Hal,
Just let the firmware do what it does. The detection and adjustments can
Hi
At least some of the Motorola receivers passed across per satellite timing
information. That would allow you to play with what you used or didn't use
in the firmware.
Bob
-Original Message-
From: time-nuts-boun...@febo.com [mailto:time-nuts-boun...@febo.com] On
Behalf Of Hal Murray
Se
li...@rtty.us said:
> If the firmware is fine tuning something, (like s/n or elevation) that would
> explain the first issue. If it's something like s/n where they may be
> averaging values, then a single bad packet *could* mess up their averaging
> and "turn it all off".
What can the firmware d
Hi
My though is that you have two issues:
1) The fact that the receiver reports more sat's than the firmware.
2) The drop outs.
If the firmware is fine tuning something, (like s/n or elevation) that would
explain the first issue. If it's something like s/n where they may be
averaging values, the
Hi Bob,
The elevation mask is handled by the receiver, but I was wondering about
the s/n or signal strength. But it seems unlikely that all the
satellites would simultaneously fall below the magic threshold. In any
case, I will capture the data and see if there's anything interesting.
Thank
Hi
GPS receivers have gotten better over the years. The early Motorola receivers
were relatively deaf compared to a TBolt. A TBolt is a bit deaf compared to a
LEA5-T.
My bet for the actual problem is that HP is doing elevation masks and s/n
detection in their firmware rather than in the recei
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