TV
Tom Van Baak
Thu, Apr 30, 2015 4:50 PM
I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
Thanks,
/tvb
Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS Receiver. I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see if it works and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard up/down convertor board that changes the receiver input frequency which is set at 4.092 MHz. I don't have the needed down converter at the antenna. I bought this receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he doesn't have the down converter as well and can't figure out how to get it to work at 1575.42 MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be setup for a 1575.42 MHz by removing the onboard converter and changing some DIP switches. If one of your members can at least check out the receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite tracking That would be a big help ...
I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
Thanks,
/tvb
----------
Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS Receiver. I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see if it works and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard up/down convertor board that changes the receiver input frequency which is set at 4.092 MHz. I don't have the needed down converter at the antenna. I bought this receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he doesn't have the down converter as well and can't figure out how to get it to work at 1575.42 MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be setup for a 1575.42 MHz by removing the onboard converter and changing some DIP switches. If one of your members can at least check out the receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite tracking That would be a big help ...
----------
BH
Bill Hawkins
Thu, Apr 30, 2015 5:41 PM
Well, the world's favorite search engine has several hits for a TrueTime
XL-AK. There is a manual for the XL-AK 600 receiver. The PDF does not
include the schematic. A down converter is listed as an option, to be
mounted within a foot of the antenna. There is no discussion of the down
converter beyond mounting it close to the antenna.
The manual says the unit was designed in 1994 and is capable of
acquiring six satellites. If the receiver input is 4 MHz, it requires
the down converter at the antenna. This allows use of inexpensive cable
in 1994.
I'd expect this receiver to be as useless as the TrueTime GOES receiver.
Antenna and converter will be hard to find, as they were probably junked
separately. I would not expect the receiver to be set up by changing
some dip switches.
Now, if someone had the RF skills to build a GHz to MHz converter, it
might work.
Bill Hawkins
-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Van Baak
Sent: Thursday, April 30, 2015 11:51 AM
I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
Thanks,
/tvb
Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone
in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS
Receiver. I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see
if it works and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard
up/down convertor board that changes the receiver input frequency which
is set at 4.092 MHz. I don't have the needed down converter at the
antenna. I bought this receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he
doesn't have the down converter as well and can't figure out how to get
it to work at 1575.42 MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be
setup for a 1575.42 MHz by removing the onboard converter and changing
some DIP switches. If one of your members can at least check out the
receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite tracking That would be a big help
...
Well, the world's favorite search engine has several hits for a TrueTime
XL-AK. There is a manual for the XL-AK 600 receiver. The PDF does not
include the schematic. A down converter is listed as an option, to be
mounted within a foot of the antenna. There is no discussion of the down
converter beyond mounting it close to the antenna.
The manual says the unit was designed in 1994 and is capable of
acquiring six satellites. If the receiver input is 4 MHz, it requires
the down converter at the antenna. This allows use of inexpensive cable
in 1994.
I'd expect this receiver to be as useless as the TrueTime GOES receiver.
Antenna and converter will be hard to find, as they were probably junked
separately. I would not expect the receiver to be set up by changing
some dip switches.
Now, if someone had the RF skills to build a GHz to MHz converter, it
might work.
Bill Hawkins
-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Van Baak
Sent: Thursday, April 30, 2015 11:51 AM
I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
Thanks,
/tvb
----------
Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone
in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS
Receiver. I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see
if it works and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard
up/down convertor board that changes the receiver input frequency which
is set at 4.092 MHz. I don't have the needed down converter at the
antenna. I bought this receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he
doesn't have the down converter as well and can't figure out how to get
it to work at 1575.42 MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be
setup for a 1575.42 MHz by removing the onboard converter and changing
some DIP switches. If one of your members can at least check out the
receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite tracking That would be a big help
...
----------
AP
Alex Pummer
Thu, Apr 30, 2015 5:55 PM
I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
Thanks,
/tvb
Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS Receiver. I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see if it works and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard up/down convertor board that changes the receiver input frequency which is set at 4.092 MHz. I don't have the needed down converter at the antenna. I bought this receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he doesn't have the down converter as well and can't figure out how to get it to work at 1575.42 MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be setup for a 1575.42 MHz by removing the onboard converter and changing some DIP switches. If one of your members can at least check out the receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite tracking That would be a big help ...
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
I am not so sure that it is applying to that case, but there are GPS
antenna cable extenders which converting down the incoming GPS signal
to frequencies at which the cable attenuation see here:
http://www.microsemi.com/products/timing-synchronization-systems/accessories/government/l1-gps-antenna-down-up-conv
http://www.gigatest.net/symmetricom%20TT&M/GPS%20&%20Time%20Code%20Instrumentation/ds_gps_antenna.pdf
73
KJ6UHN Alex
On 4/30/2015 9:50 AM, Tom Van Baak wrote:
> I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
> Thanks,
> /tvb
>
> ----------
> Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS Receiver. I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see if it works and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard up/down convertor board that changes the receiver input frequency which is set at 4.092 MHz. I don't have the needed down converter at the antenna. I bought this receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he doesn't have the down converter as well and can't figure out how to get it to work at 1575.42 MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be setup for a 1575.42 MHz by removing the onboard converter and changing some DIP switches. If one of your members can at least check out the receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite tracking That would be a big help ...
> ----------
>
> _______________________________________________
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.
BH
Bill Hawkins
Thu, Apr 30, 2015 7:34 PM
Very interesting that the signal is down-converted to 4.092 MHz to match
the ancient XL-AK receiver.
They are intended to be sold as pairs, but it may be possible to get
only the down converter. The source of the 16 MHz LO seems to be on the
down side, which is OK, A separate power cable is required. So is some
discussion of the application with the manufacturer.
Bill Hawkins
-----Original Message-----
From: time-nuts [mailto:time-nuts-bounces@febo.com] On Behalf Of Alex
Pummer
Sent: Thursday, April 30, 2015 12:56 PM
To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] TrueTime AL-AK GPS receiver help
I am not so sure that it is applying to that case, but there are GPS
antenna cable extenders which converting down the incoming GPS signal
to frequencies at which the cable attenuation see here:
http://www.microsemi.com/products/timing-synchronization-systems/accesso
ries/government/l1-gps-antenna-down-up-conv
http://www.gigatest.net/symmetricom%20TT&M/GPS%20&%20Time%20Code%20Instr
umentation/ds_gps_antenna.pdf
73
KJ6UHN Alex
Very interesting that the signal is down-converted to 4.092 MHz to match
the ancient XL-AK receiver.
They are intended to be sold as pairs, but it may be possible to get
only the down converter. The source of the 16 MHz LO seems to be on the
down side, which is OK, A separate power cable is required. So is some
discussion of the application with the manufacturer.
Bill Hawkins
-----Original Message-----
From: time-nuts [mailto:time-nuts-bounces@febo.com] On Behalf Of Alex
Pummer
Sent: Thursday, April 30, 2015 12:56 PM
To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] TrueTime AL-AK GPS receiver help
I am not so sure that it is applying to that case, but there are GPS
antenna cable extenders which converting down the incoming GPS signal
to frequencies at which the cable attenuation see here:
http://www.microsemi.com/products/timing-synchronization-systems/accesso
ries/government/l1-gps-antenna-down-up-conv
http://www.gigatest.net/symmetricom%20TT&M/GPS%20&%20Time%20Code%20Instr
umentation/ds_gps_antenna.pdf
73
KJ6UHN Alex
PS
paul swed
Thu, Apr 30, 2015 7:54 PM
I can add some insights to way-ward receivers that are missing the down
converters. You can indeed fabricate replacements or like I have done for
several units like Austrons adapted Odetics downcoverters in. This is not
at all easy you have to be time-nutty to do this. It takes reverse
engineering and than almost always a mixer and local oscillator to shift
the signals around. Some of the old rockwell and other gps receivers had
nice IF frequencies at 35 Mhz. Easy to work with. However the more
integrated a receiver is the less likely you can access what you want like
IFs and LOs.
One key thing I ran into is that the receiver you want to make work has to
control the first LO. So that means as an example in the Austrons case
using its 10 MHz LO to multiply up and that same signal had to replace the
rockwell 10 MHz crystal.This required a TTL to PECL conversion and some
really small wires.
You could actually go a more direct route these days and build a LO chain
to 1.5 GHz using PLLs they seem pretty reasonable. Most of the converter
schemes I have reversed engineered seemed to produce a 74 MHz IF or 35 Mhz.
Good luck and if the receiver is going to be scrapped I might want to
tinker.
Good luck if you move forward.
Regards
Paul
WB8TSL
On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 1:55 PM, Alex Pummer alex@pcscons.com wrote:
I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
Thanks,
/tvb
Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone
in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS Receiver.
I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see if it works
and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard up/down convertor
board that changes the receiver input frequency which is set at 4.092 MHz.
I don't have the needed down converter at the antenna. I bought this
receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he doesn't have the down
converter as well and can't figure out how to get it to work at 1575.42
MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be setup for a 1575.42 MHz by
removing the onboard converter and changing some DIP switches. If one of
your members can at least check out the receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite
tracking That would be a big help ...
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to
https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
I can add some insights to way-ward receivers that are missing the down
converters. You can indeed fabricate replacements or like I have done for
several units like Austrons adapted Odetics downcoverters in. This is not
at all easy you have to be time-nutty to do this. It takes reverse
engineering and than almost always a mixer and local oscillator to shift
the signals around. Some of the old rockwell and other gps receivers had
nice IF frequencies at 35 Mhz. Easy to work with. However the more
integrated a receiver is the less likely you can access what you want like
IFs and LOs.
One key thing I ran into is that the receiver you want to make work has to
control the first LO. So that means as an example in the Austrons case
using its 10 MHz LO to multiply up and that same signal had to replace the
rockwell 10 MHz crystal.This required a TTL to PECL conversion and some
really small wires.
You could actually go a more direct route these days and build a LO chain
to 1.5 GHz using PLLs they seem pretty reasonable. Most of the converter
schemes I have reversed engineered seemed to produce a 74 MHz IF or 35 Mhz.
Good luck and if the receiver is going to be scrapped I might want to
tinker.
Good luck if you move forward.
Regards
Paul
WB8TSL
On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 1:55 PM, Alex Pummer <alex@pcscons.com> wrote:
> I am not so sure that it is applying to that case, but there are GPS
> antenna cable extenders which converting down the incoming GPS signal to
> frequencies at which the cable attenuation see here:
> http://www.microsemi.com/products/timing-synchronization-systems/accessories/government/l1-gps-antenna-down-up-conv
>
> http://www.gigatest.net/symmetricom%20TT&M/GPS%20&%20Time%20Code%20Instrumentation/ds_gps_antenna.pdf
> 73
> KJ6UHN Alex
>
>
> On 4/30/2015 9:50 AM, Tom Van Baak wrote:
>
>> I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
>> Thanks,
>> /tvb
>>
>> ----------
>> Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone
>> in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS Receiver.
>> I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see if it works
>> and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard up/down convertor
>> board that changes the receiver input frequency which is set at 4.092 MHz.
>> I don't have the needed down converter at the antenna. I bought this
>> receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he doesn't have the down
>> converter as well and can't figure out how to get it to work at 1575.42
>> MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be setup for a 1575.42 MHz by
>> removing the onboard converter and changing some DIP switches. If one of
>> your members can at least check out the receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite
>> tracking That would be a big help ...
>> ----------
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
>> To unsubscribe, go to
>> https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>> and follow the instructions there.
>>
>
> _______________________________________________
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to
> https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.
>
BC
Bob Camp
Thu, Apr 30, 2015 9:58 PM
Hi
I guess the first question would be:
Are we sure it’s an AL-AK and not an XL-AK?
Past that it becomes a fairly involved process of, is it worth real money to get this up and running?
If we are talking about a $20 eBay find that is worth another $5 to have somebody else get it running, the
conversation is a real short one.
If the AL-AK has some inherent value (it’s a working GPS disciplined Cs maybe) then putting a few hundred
dollars into checking it out and getting it running might make sense. If it’s like most of the parts from that
era, the delta between getting it checked and getting it running is pretty small.
Once you do have it running, what do you have?
- Leap second problems
- GPS year rollover problems
- Tracking issues
- A noisy receiver with very few correlators
- Software support issues
This is an unusual box that is at least 20 years old. It will have at least some of the listed issues and
may have all of them. Fixing them will be impossible.
========
Why bring up all of the negatives? I for one have been sucked into this kind of thing a lot of times
in the past. Just a few more this or that and it’ll be running fine. Much better to figure out the likely
cost and outcome first. That’s very hard to do, and even harder to follow through on. If you can’t
do the work yourself, the cost isn’t just lost time. This can cost real cash.
Bob
On Apr 30, 2015, at 12:50 PM, Tom Van Baak tvb@LeapSecond.com wrote:
I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
Thanks,
/tvb
Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS Receiver. I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see if it works and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard up/down convertor board that changes the receiver input frequency which is set at 4.092 MHz. I don't have the needed down converter at the antenna. I bought this receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he doesn't have the down converter as well and can't figure out how to get it to work at 1575.42 MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be setup for a 1575.42 MHz by removing the onboard converter and changing some DIP switches. If one of your members can at least check out the receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite tracking That would be a big help ...
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
Hi
I guess the first question would be:
Are we sure it’s an AL-AK and not an XL-AK?
Past that it becomes a fairly involved process of, is it worth real money to get this up and running?
If we are talking about a $20 eBay find that is worth another $5 to have somebody else get it running, the
conversation is a real short one.
If the AL-AK has some inherent value (it’s a working GPS disciplined Cs maybe) then putting a few hundred
dollars into checking it out and getting it running might make sense. If it’s like most of the parts from that
era, the delta between getting it checked and getting it running is pretty small.
Once you *do* have it running, what do you have?
1) Leap second problems
2) GPS year rollover problems
3) Tracking issues
4) A noisy receiver with very few correlators
5) Software support issues
This is an unusual box that is at least 20 years old. It *will* have at least some of the listed issues and
may have all of them. Fixing them will be impossible.
========
Why bring up all of the negatives? I for one have been sucked into this kind of thing a *lot* of times
in the past. Just a few more this or that and it’ll be running fine. Much better to figure out the likely
cost and outcome first. That’s *very* hard to do, and even harder to follow through on. If you can’t
do the work yourself, the cost isn’t just lost time. This can cost real cash.
Bob
> On Apr 30, 2015, at 12:50 PM, Tom Van Baak <tvb@LeapSecond.com> wrote:
>
> I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
> Thanks,
> /tvb
>
> ----------
> Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS Receiver. I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see if it works and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard up/down convertor board that changes the receiver input frequency which is set at 4.092 MHz. I don't have the needed down converter at the antenna. I bought this receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he doesn't have the down converter as well and can't figure out how to get it to work at 1575.42 MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be setup for a 1575.42 MHz by removing the onboard converter and changing some DIP switches. If one of your members can at least check out the receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite tracking That would be a big help ...
> ----------
>
> _______________________________________________
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.
PS
paul swed
Sat, May 2, 2015 1:55 AM
Bob brings up all the additional details that are the reality of dealing
with teh older gear. Especially the date offsets because of the 1024 week
cycle. That is a real pain.
But the reason to spend time on something like this is to understand
something and to learn.
I picked up the austron 2000 gps because it was a useful rack mount box.
Then realized some of its unique qualities. That was the driver for
reviving it.
I was lucky that I was able to obtain some operational data and then later
schematics. BUT it was still a heck of a reverse engineering and adapting
process.
I am pretty sure I shared that on time-nuts and will guess that must be 5
years ago now.
Regards
Paul
WB8TSL
On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 5:58 PM, Bob Camp kb8tq@n1k.org wrote:
Hi
I guess the first question would be:
Are we sure it’s an AL-AK and not an XL-AK?
Past that it becomes a fairly involved process of, is it worth real money
to get this up and running?
If we are talking about a $20 eBay find that is worth another $5 to have
somebody else get it running, the
conversation is a real short one.
If the AL-AK has some inherent value (it’s a working GPS disciplined Cs
maybe) then putting a few hundred
dollars into checking it out and getting it running might make sense. If
it’s like most of the parts from that
era, the delta between getting it checked and getting it running is pretty
small.
Once you do have it running, what do you have?
- Leap second problems
- GPS year rollover problems
- Tracking issues
- A noisy receiver with very few correlators
- Software support issues
This is an unusual box that is at least 20 years old. It will have at
least some of the listed issues and
may have all of them. Fixing them will be impossible.
========
Why bring up all of the negatives? I for one have been sucked into this
kind of thing a lot of times
in the past. Just a few more this or that and it’ll be running fine. Much
better to figure out the likely
cost and outcome first. That’s very hard to do, and even harder to
follow through on. If you can’t
do the work yourself, the cost isn’t just lost time. This can cost real
cash.
Bob
On Apr 30, 2015, at 12:50 PM, Tom Van Baak tvb@LeapSecond.com wrote:
I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
Thanks,
/tvb
Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone
in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS Receiver.
I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see if it works
and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard up/down convertor
board that changes the receiver input frequency which is set at 4.092 MHz.
I don't have the needed down converter at the antenna. I bought this
receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he doesn't have the down
converter as well and can't figure out how to get it to work at 1575.42
MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be setup for a 1575.42 MHz by
removing the onboard converter and changing some DIP switches. If one of
your members can at least check out the receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite
tracking That would be a big help ...
and follow the instructions there.
Bob brings up all the additional details that are the reality of dealing
with teh older gear. Especially the date offsets because of the 1024 week
cycle. That is a real pain.
But the reason to spend time on something like this is to understand
something and to learn.
I picked up the austron 2000 gps because it was a useful rack mount box.
Then realized some of its unique qualities. That was the driver for
reviving it.
I was lucky that I was able to obtain some operational data and then later
schematics. BUT it was still a heck of a reverse engineering and adapting
process.
I am pretty sure I shared that on time-nuts and will guess that must be 5
years ago now.
Regards
Paul
WB8TSL
On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 5:58 PM, Bob Camp <kb8tq@n1k.org> wrote:
> Hi
>
> I guess the first question would be:
>
> Are we sure it’s an AL-AK and not an XL-AK?
>
> Past that it becomes a fairly involved process of, is it worth real money
> to get this up and running?
>
> If we are talking about a $20 eBay find that is worth another $5 to have
> somebody else get it running, the
> conversation is a real short one.
>
> If the AL-AK has some inherent value (it’s a working GPS disciplined Cs
> maybe) then putting a few hundred
> dollars into checking it out and getting it running might make sense. If
> it’s like most of the parts from that
> era, the delta between getting it checked and getting it running is pretty
> small.
>
> Once you *do* have it running, what do you have?
>
> 1) Leap second problems
> 2) GPS year rollover problems
> 3) Tracking issues
> 4) A noisy receiver with very few correlators
> 5) Software support issues
>
> This is an unusual box that is at least 20 years old. It *will* have at
> least some of the listed issues and
> may have all of them. Fixing them will be impossible.
>
> ========
>
> Why bring up all of the negatives? I for one have been sucked into this
> kind of thing a *lot* of times
> in the past. Just a few more this or that and it’ll be running fine. Much
> better to figure out the likely
> cost and outcome first. That’s *very* hard to do, and even harder to
> follow through on. If you can’t
> do the work yourself, the cost isn’t just lost time. This can cost real
> cash.
>
> Bob
>
>
> > On Apr 30, 2015, at 12:50 PM, Tom Van Baak <tvb@LeapSecond.com> wrote:
> >
> > I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
> > Thanks,
> > /tvb
> >
> > ----------
> > Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone
> in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS Receiver.
> I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see if it works
> and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard up/down convertor
> board that changes the receiver input frequency which is set at 4.092 MHz.
> I don't have the needed down converter at the antenna. I bought this
> receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he doesn't have the down
> converter as well and can't figure out how to get it to work at 1575.42
> MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be setup for a 1575.42 MHz by
> removing the onboard converter and changing some DIP switches. If one of
> your members can at least check out the receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite
> tracking That would be a big help ...
> > ----------
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> > To unsubscribe, go to
> https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> > and follow the instructions there.
>
> _______________________________________________
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to
> https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.
>
BC
Bob Camp
Sat, May 2, 2015 1:50 PM
Hi
If you want to dig into something like this to learn and to maybe fiddle with a
downconverter design - sure, that’s a great thing to do. It’s a hobby and (hopefully)
you are set up to handle the task. You probably are already a member of a list (or three)
where you have access to info on your project.
Since we have zero info about the original requester, I am indeed guessing here.
That can often be a bad thing to do. My guess is that this is somebody who
simply wants a working device. If so, there are a lot of bumps in the road that
they need to understand. If the answer is “I want a simple NTP server that is setup
and forget”, this is probably not the way to go.
Bob
On May 1, 2015, at 9:55 PM, paul swed paulswedb@gmail.com wrote:
Bob brings up all the additional details that are the reality of dealing
with teh older gear. Especially the date offsets because of the 1024 week
cycle. That is a real pain.
But the reason to spend time on something like this is to understand
something and to learn.
I picked up the austron 2000 gps because it was a useful rack mount box.
Then realized some of its unique qualities. That was the driver for
reviving it.
I was lucky that I was able to obtain some operational data and then later
schematics. BUT it was still a heck of a reverse engineering and adapting
process.
I am pretty sure I shared that on time-nuts and will guess that must be 5
years ago now.
Regards
Paul
WB8TSL
On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 5:58 PM, Bob Camp kb8tq@n1k.org wrote:
Hi
I guess the first question would be:
Are we sure it’s an AL-AK and not an XL-AK?
Past that it becomes a fairly involved process of, is it worth real money
to get this up and running?
If we are talking about a $20 eBay find that is worth another $5 to have
somebody else get it running, the
conversation is a real short one.
If the AL-AK has some inherent value (it’s a working GPS disciplined Cs
maybe) then putting a few hundred
dollars into checking it out and getting it running might make sense. If
it’s like most of the parts from that
era, the delta between getting it checked and getting it running is pretty
small.
Once you do have it running, what do you have?
- Leap second problems
- GPS year rollover problems
- Tracking issues
- A noisy receiver with very few correlators
- Software support issues
This is an unusual box that is at least 20 years old. It will have at
least some of the listed issues and
may have all of them. Fixing them will be impossible.
========
Why bring up all of the negatives? I for one have been sucked into this
kind of thing a lot of times
in the past. Just a few more this or that and it’ll be running fine. Much
better to figure out the likely
cost and outcome first. That’s very hard to do, and even harder to
follow through on. If you can’t
do the work yourself, the cost isn’t just lost time. This can cost real
cash.
Bob
On Apr 30, 2015, at 12:50 PM, Tom Van Baak tvb@LeapSecond.com wrote:
I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
Thanks,
/tvb
Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone
in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS Receiver.
I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see if it works
and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard up/down convertor
board that changes the receiver input frequency which is set at 4.092 MHz.
I don't have the needed down converter at the antenna. I bought this
receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he doesn't have the down
converter as well and can't figure out how to get it to work at 1575.42
MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be setup for a 1575.42 MHz by
removing the onboard converter and changing some DIP switches. If one of
your members can at least check out the receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite
tracking That would be a big help ...
and follow the instructions there.
Hi
If you want to dig into something like this to learn and to maybe fiddle with a
downconverter design - sure, that’s a great thing to do. It’s a hobby and (hopefully)
you are set up to handle the task. You probably are already a member of a list (or three)
where you have access to info on your project.
Since we have zero info about the original requester, I am indeed guessing here.
That can often be a bad thing to do. My *guess* is that this is somebody who
simply wants a working device. If so, there are a lot of bumps in the road that
they need to understand. If the answer is “I want a simple NTP server that is setup
and forget”, this is probably not the way to go.
Bob
> On May 1, 2015, at 9:55 PM, paul swed <paulswedb@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Bob brings up all the additional details that are the reality of dealing
> with teh older gear. Especially the date offsets because of the 1024 week
> cycle. That is a real pain.
> But the reason to spend time on something like this is to understand
> something and to learn.
> I picked up the austron 2000 gps because it was a useful rack mount box.
> Then realized some of its unique qualities. That was the driver for
> reviving it.
> I was lucky that I was able to obtain some operational data and then later
> schematics. BUT it was still a heck of a reverse engineering and adapting
> process.
> I am pretty sure I shared that on time-nuts and will guess that must be 5
> years ago now.
> Regards
> Paul
> WB8TSL
>
> On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 5:58 PM, Bob Camp <kb8tq@n1k.org> wrote:
>
>> Hi
>>
>> I guess the first question would be:
>>
>> Are we sure it’s an AL-AK and not an XL-AK?
>>
>> Past that it becomes a fairly involved process of, is it worth real money
>> to get this up and running?
>>
>> If we are talking about a $20 eBay find that is worth another $5 to have
>> somebody else get it running, the
>> conversation is a real short one.
>>
>> If the AL-AK has some inherent value (it’s a working GPS disciplined Cs
>> maybe) then putting a few hundred
>> dollars into checking it out and getting it running might make sense. If
>> it’s like most of the parts from that
>> era, the delta between getting it checked and getting it running is pretty
>> small.
>>
>> Once you *do* have it running, what do you have?
>>
>> 1) Leap second problems
>> 2) GPS year rollover problems
>> 3) Tracking issues
>> 4) A noisy receiver with very few correlators
>> 5) Software support issues
>>
>> This is an unusual box that is at least 20 years old. It *will* have at
>> least some of the listed issues and
>> may have all of them. Fixing them will be impossible.
>>
>> ========
>>
>> Why bring up all of the negatives? I for one have been sucked into this
>> kind of thing a *lot* of times
>> in the past. Just a few more this or that and it’ll be running fine. Much
>> better to figure out the likely
>> cost and outcome first. That’s *very* hard to do, and even harder to
>> follow through on. If you can’t
>> do the work yourself, the cost isn’t just lost time. This can cost real
>> cash.
>>
>> Bob
>>
>>
>>> On Apr 30, 2015, at 12:50 PM, Tom Van Baak <tvb@LeapSecond.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> I received this email. Anyone have a good answer?
>>> Thanks,
>>> /tvb
>>>
>>> ----------
>>> Someone on ebay advised me to contact your website in hopes that someone
>> in your organization can help me with my TrueTime model AL-AK GPS Receiver.
>> I need to send it to someone so that they can check it to see if it works
>> and can track Satellites. This receiver has the onboard up/down convertor
>> board that changes the receiver input frequency which is set at 4.092 MHz.
>> I don't have the needed down converter at the antenna. I bought this
>> receiver on ebay from someone who told me that he doesn't have the down
>> converter as well and can't figure out how to get it to work at 1575.42
>> MHz. He also didn't know if this receiver can be setup for a 1575.42 MHz by
>> removing the onboard converter and changing some DIP switches. If one of
>> your members can at least check out the receiver at 4.092 MHz for satellite
>> tracking That would be a big help ...
>>> ----------
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
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