The Thunderbolt does not seem to be the most sensitive receiver around,  but it 
does not seem particularly bad.  Sensitivity in a time receiver can be a bad 
thing...  more sensitivity tends to make it more susceptible to multipath, etc. 
 These things were meant to be mounted on cell towers, etc where they have a 
pretty clear view of the sky.  Once you have that,  you don't need high 
sensitivity.  Also their proximity to high power RF transmitters makes overly 
sensitive front ends a problem.

On the subject of GPS amplifiers...  adding external amplification to a GPS may 
not improve its performance and can actually degrade it.  All amplifiers 
amplify signal and noise,  plus distort everything in the process. (fundamental 
laws of the universe: 1) You can't get something for nothing,  2) You can't 
break even,  3) You'll die trying)   Ideally,  you want the amplifier at  the 
antenna and you want the amplification to match the cable loss and no more.  
Generally GPS receivers with poor sensitivity have poorly designed front ends 
or signal processing.  Yelling in their ears won't make them work any better.
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