You already have a PPS signal from your existing GPS, so I was thinking
simply of distributing that the the Windows PCs, and feeding it to the
serial port's DCD signal.


I will try that. I guess you can connect serial port directly to my
Uputronics expansion card (
https://store.uputronics.com/index.php?route=product/product&path=60_64&product_id=81)
while still attached to Raspberry Pi. Problem is, I'm a software, not a
hardware guy. No idea about soldering. Time to learn a new skill :)

If the PC doesn't have a serial port, check on the motherboard because
there
are sometimes serial port headers left unconnected by the PC manufacturer.


That's exactly in my case. Motherboard manual says the serial port
expansion is sold separately.

[..] Check with your Android mobile phone
what the GPS signal levels actually are in your possible locations - I
think
Apple don't allow you to access that information.


I don't have access to any Android device :( I'll try to use gpsmon or
other tool to check GPS signal level (S/N ratio of satellites should be
sufficient, I guess?).


The key here is to have some conducting magnetic material under the
antenna,
not just sitting on its own.


My GPS antenna hangs on the window handle and still gives the good result.
It's on the south facing window. Unfortunately, in the new location I will
have access only to west facing window.
Why is it good to have some conducting magnetic material under the antenna?
Is it to reduce multipath?

Best regards,
Adam
===========================

Adam,

Be aware that the signals from the Uputronics board (and similar) are most likely to be at a 3.3V level, which /may/ not be sufficient to drive the DCD pin on a traditional RS232 port, and you may need a level converter. You don't need to connect the other lines - send & receive - just the DCD and ground. I have a simple program which enables you to check for the pulsing of the DCD line (and the other lines too):

 https://www.satsignal.eu/software/net.htm#SerialPortLEDs

Yes, if you can use cgps or similar that would be fine - I just find the phone handier!

The puck antennas are designed for use with a ground plane, and the maximum pickup is then at 90 degrees to the ground-plane. I don't think that on these cheap antennas there's any multipath reduction, just more gain from having the ground plane. Be aware that in the new location the glass may have some attenuation at 1.5 GHz as used by GPS.

Cheers,
David
--
SatSignal Software - Quality software for you
Web: http://www.satsignal.eu
Email: david-tay...@blueyonder.co.uk
Twitter: @gm8arv

_______________________________________________
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.

Reply via email to