NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Extremely poor conditions??
From: Bill B
Date: 2012 Mar 22, 19:38 -0400
From: Bill B
Date: 2012 Mar 22, 19:38 -0400
On 3/21/2012 5:36 PM, Alexandre E Eremenko wrote: > > Greg, > >> I have had two different digital atomic clocks jump a complete >> minute on me out of the blue for no reason. > > Are you serious... But Bill was comparing. (All electronic toys, > except a Casio calculator are his). > >> I still think you are a minute out in your time rather >> than having a horizon 3.5 miles away elevated 11 moa. > As I write to Alex: "Spring break on a beach in Michigan in winter. 80+ F and people in swimsuits and swimming. If you can believe that, 10' ought to be a easy! I have two "clam shell" clocks (folds up like a travel clock). The first did a horrible job of picking up the time signal from Colorado, so i set it to UTC Zulu and to keep it next to my main computer to keep me honest. The second has been excellent. It automatically polls Colorado about midnight. I keep it facing CO on a three-seasons porch so it re-calibrates every day if needed. approached the list with the following question(s) about six years ago, but never really understood the "why" despite mentions of satellites corrections for gravity wells etc. The "atomic clock" (actually a clock that polls the atomic clock) is usually about a second different than my Garmin marine GPS, even when DUT1 is supposedly 0. Why? (I have just checked the GPS against the clock at UTC 23:34:xx, and they are so close I cannot see a difference. I will recheck right after the clock re-calibrate tonight.) A few side questions: Is Colorado transmitting UTC with leap second adjustments? Do satellites carry their own clocks, or are they synced up with CO and then making on board adjustments for speed/relativity and gravity well? Does GPS show UTC or UTC1 time?