J
John Larkin
Guest
On Tue, 16 Sep 2014 10:58:08 -0700, dplatt@coop.radagast.org (David
Platt) wrote:
The question is whether the 1 PPS ever happens any more or any less
than 10,000,000 cycles of the 10 MHz output.
I'd be shocked if it ever did.
The phase relationship between the 1PPS TTL rise, and the 10 MHz sine
wave, can be measured and allowed for, as long as it never slips a
full 100 ns.
--
John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
Platt) wrote:
In article <hing1a9qugb9fjahclbeendus8ehjiu9o6@4ax.com>,
John Larkin <jlarkin@highlandtechnology.com> wrote:
The GPS module will have a local clock in the few tens of MHz range.
One that I know about had to put the 1PPS edge on one of its local clock
edges, instead of exactly at the start of the second. For high
precision, you have to take this into account. The one I used could
tell you (via its serial port) the offset between the most recent 1PPS
pulse and when the second actually started, so you can apply a
correction. This had to happen for every single 1PPS edge.
I assume that a 1PPS pulse will happen exactly every 1e7 of the 10 MHz
sine wave. If that's not true, we're in for interesting times.
Saying "exactly" for timing coincidence which involves continuous
waveforms is a trifle risky...
The Motorola Oncore receivers (quite popular some years ago) exhibited
this behavior. There's a predictable deterministic "sawtooth" pattern
to the timing offset between "true start of second" and "leading edge
of the PPS pulse". As noted, you can determine this offset
after-the-fact for any particular pulse, and can even predict it
fairly well some time in advance.
I believe that this situation remains true for many more-modern GPS
receivers... the PPS pulse is synchronous to an internal clock (which
is probably faster than that of the Oncore).
I'd guess that some high-end timing-grade GPS receivers may "bend"
their internal clocks to reduce the clock-related PPS jitter... but
there's always going to be some.
The question is whether the 1 PPS ever happens any more or any less
than 10,000,000 cycles of the 10 MHz output.
I'd be shocked if it ever did.
The phase relationship between the 1PPS TTL rise, and the 10 MHz sine
wave, can be measured and allowed for, as long as it never slips a
full 100 ns.
--
John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com