Hi Bjorn,

> For navigation more measurements have always been prefered - that
> is use as many GNSS systems as all your receicers support.

I would like to believe this. There's a common myth with clocks that more is 
always better. For example, if you have 4 cesium then adding 5 more gives you 
an improvement of sqrt(4) to sqrt(9) or 50% better. And similarly, if you go 
from receiving 4 SV to 9 SV your position and timing fixes will get 50% better.

But it seems to me that "more is better" only works when each unit has similar 
accuracy and stability to begin with. If you have 4 cesium and add 5 quartz you 
do not get better performance. Instead the quartz will strongly degrade your 
net result.

Someday when GLONASS and Galileo and BeiDou match GPS in accuracy at the cm and 
sub-ns level your claim that more is always better will be true. From what I've 
read we're not at that point yet. If you can find some papers to the contrary 
please let me know. We're in a very exciting decade or two of GNSS evolution 
and coordination.

Meanwhile it would not surprise me if each GNSS system gives a slightly 
different position and a slightly different time than GPS does.

If someone has a couple of LES-M8T to spare, would you configure each one to a 
single GNSS and then post a one day or one month record of 3D position and 
timing amongst all 4 systems? That would replace all our mutual conjecture with 
actual hard numbers.

/tvb

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Björn" <b...@lysator.liu.se>
To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" <time-nuts@febo.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 07, 2016 7:43 AM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] LEA-M8T


For navigation more measurements have always been prefered - that is use as 
many GNSS systems as all your receicers support.

That should be true also for common view timing.

--
Björn

<div>-------- Originalmeddelande --------</div><div>Från: Bob Camp 
<kb...@n1k.org> </div><div>Datum:2016-04-07  18:41  (GMT+07:00) 
</div><div>Till: Bob Stewart <b...@evoria.net>, Discussion of precise time and 
frequency measurement <time-nuts@febo.com> </div><div>Rubrik: Re: [time-nuts] 
LEA-M8T </div><div>
</div>Hi

Indeed, if you have not turned off the other systems for timing, you will have 
issues. Even for 
precision navigation, you need to turn them off. Until the European system goes 
up, there will 
not ba a coordinated approach between any two of the systems. Right now they 
each make their
own assumptions and their own definitions. If you are driving a car down the 
road, that’s not a 
big deal. If you are trying to do TimeNuts stuff … A one meter delta is a big 
deal for timing. A “few”
nanoseconds (say >10) is also a big deal. 

Bob


> On Apr 6, 2016, at 9:39 PM, Bob Stewart <b...@evoria.net> wrote:
> 
> Hi Logan,
> 
> I seem to remember Bob Camp mentioning that you can't have multiple satellite 
> sources in the mix, because the other satellites are inferior to the GPS sats 
> in timing.  Maybe Bob or someone could address this.  I would love to 
> discover that I've set something wrong in all the many, many data structures.
> 
> Bob
> 
> 
> --------------------------------------------
> On Wed, 4/6/16, Logan Cummings <logan.cummi...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] LEA-M8T
> To: "Bob Stewart" <b...@evoria.net>, "Discussion of precise time and 
> frequency measurement" <time-nuts@febo.com>
> Date: Wednesday, April 6, 2016, 8:18 PM
> 
> Hi
> Bob, 
>     Can't speak to
> jitter accuracy but the M8 series is definitely not the same
> receiver in the 6 series. As you probably know, M8
> introduced multi-GNSS support so in addition to GPS you have
> Beidou and Glonass satellites.    
>       At work we've had some gnashing of
> teeth about the wider filter passband requirements for
> multi-GNSS support since we're operating in a noisy
> environment, but I have nothing further on degraded
> performance when using only GPS.
>      Would be interesting to let
> it have all the constellations and see what
> happens.
> -Logan
> On Wed, Apr 6, 2016 at
> 10:04 AM, Bob Stewart <b...@evoria.net>
> wrote:
> I
> recently bought a number of LEA-M8T receivers and I have to
> say that I am unimpressed, so far.  They don't survey
> to the same reported accuracy as the LEA-6T in the same
> amount of time.  They certainly aren't better in the
> jitter after sawtooth correction.  So, have I managed to
> overlook some new field, or are they just not the same
> receiver as the 6T?  I did shut all sats off except GPS
> sats.
> 
> 
> 
> Bob - AE6RV
> 
> _______________________________________________

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