I don't think Heather v5.0 ever worked with the ACE-III. Heather uses the TSIP
primary and secondary timing messages to drive the display. The ACE-III (and
SV6) don't output those messages. The next release of Heather has SV6 support
and also supports the Trimble TAIP protocol that these
polarized tantalum in correctly?
Regards,
Jerry
> On Dec 19, 2017, at 2:20 PM, Dan Rae wrote:
>
> I've been trying to get LH (V5) to control and set position for the GPS board
> in one of my GPSDOs. It is a Trimble "Lassen Ace III" Rx according to
> itself. LH auto
I had similar symptoms with LH and T-Bolt. The cause was the serial
port. As I change the serial port HW on computer site - T-Bolt was back
to track.
it was interesting enough that other devices was OK with initial Serial
port HW.
On 2017-12-19 17:20, Dan Rae wrote:
I've been trying to
I've been trying to get LH (V5) to control and set position for the GPS
board in one of my GPSDOs. It is a Trimble "Lassen Ace III" Rx
according to itself. LH auto detects it quickly enough, reports it as a
TSIP receiver but then shows a screen saying "LOG: OFF", a blank graph
grid and
In the US, I have seen line voltage as low as 70VAC and as high as 145VAC.
That's what I design to.
The power companies say different, but my meters don't lie.
-Original Message-
From: time-nuts [mailto:time-nuts-boun...@febo.com] On Behalf Of Jeremy Nichols
Sent: Tuesday, December 19,
I put a small external fan on my 5370B, which keeps the heat sink at a
reasonable low temperature (Time-Nut content) -but- (Nixon segué) the power
company here also runs the voltage all the way up to the limit (126VAC)
because "many of our [rural, like me] customers are all-electric and the
load
TAPR sold out the first run of TICC timestamping counters but we just
took delivery of a second batch, and we're now taking orders. See
http://tapr.org/kits_ticc for details.
John
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Hi
Yes, this *is* a bit off topic. Sorry about that … I’m sure it’ll never / ever
happen
again :) …. ummm …. today ….
The voltage that supply feeds are set to is as much a public relations issue as
a
technical one. People would routinely complain “the lights are to dim”. Voltage
gets bumped