- Original Message -
From:"Tom Van Baak" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> The right way to do it is with a "3 cornered hat".
> If you have three clean pair-wise runs of three
> similar frequency standards then you can use
> a 3 cornered hat to isolate the stability of each
> of the thr
> The right way to do it is with a "3 cornered hat".
> If you have three clean pair-wise runs of three
> similar frequency standards then you can use
> a 3 cornered hat to isolate the stability of each
> of the three standards. The three lines of code
> that do this are at the end of:
Tom,
L
> Daer Tom,
>
> Thanks very much for your reply. I not only see very good answer,
> by reading your mails(and other replies from )I also got some
> idea of how you reasoning the answer. Thats most valuable for me.
>
> Another thing, I remembered you said once that all stabilities are
> relative
Daer Tom,
Thanks very much for your reply. I not only see very good answer,
by reading your mails(and other replies from )I also got some
idea of how you reasoning the answer. Thats most valuable for me.
Another thing, I remembered you said once that all stabilities are
relative. When I
> Hi everyone,
>
> I'm very glad to be here for the first time.
> Thank you John for manually registered me in.
> Thank you Tom Van Baak for putting my e-mails here and also
> for your great answer which clear up most of my confusions.
> Sorry for my poor English because its not my mother tongue.