. 24/7 Space News .
Symmetricom Announces First IEEE 1588 Network Grandmaster Clock


San Jose CA (SPX) Oct 17, 2005
Symmetricom has announced its XLi IEEE 1588 Grandmaster Clock with GPS (Global Positioning System) reference. IEEE 1588 is a new protocol that enables very accurate synchronization over Ethernet LANs and for the first time, offers users the ability to synchronize clocks within better than one hundred nanoseconds accuracy, with only a network connection.

Symmetricom's first deployment of the IEEE 1588 protocol is in its versatile XLi GPS Time and Frequency System.

"Symmetricom is the first to offer an IEEE 1588 based solution for time and frequency synchronization applications, and in doing so, will provide customer guidance in 1588 acceptance and verification testing, adoption and deployments during the infancy of this technology," commented Paul Skoog, product marketing manager at Symmetricom.

"The coupling of the IEEE 1588 protocol with hardware time stamping is a breakthrough technology that will reshape synchronization applications going forward, and is the next-generation protocol in time transfer and synchronization."

IEEE 1588 enables sub-microsecond time-of-day synchronization between clocks over standard Ethernet LAN infrastructure. Previously 1 to 10 microsecond time of day synchronization was the de facto standard using IRIG-B with dedicated coaxial cabling and 1 to 10 milliseconds was the typical synchronization accuracy using Ethernet and the Network Time Protocol (NTP).

High accuracy time distributed over standard Ethernet LAN infrastructure offers compelling benefits in the areas of cable infrastructure costs savings

(i. e. no parallel timing and data networks); improved accuracy for distributed measurements and processes; improved control system techniques; and leveraging the innovation/investment wave of network centric technology and solutions.

As an increasing number of applications integrate Ethernet and the benefits of speed, flexibility and connectivity are exploited, IEEE 1588 is expected to be adopted as an enabling technology across numerous applications because it will change the way problems are solved.

The standard is already being deployed in applications in industrial automation, turbine control systems and submarine sonar systems. As this trend continues and performance requirements become more stringent, demand for more precise timing and synchronization via Ethernet is also expected to increase.

The Boeing Company is the first customer to deploy the XLi IEEE 1588 Grandmaster clock. It will be implemented in the new 787 network based flight test data system. Boeing chose the XLi due to its modularity and Symmetricom's commitment to Boeing to deliver IEEE 1588 functionality.

"The XLi IEEE 1588 Grandmaster Clock from Symmetricom, with its ultra-precise time and frequency synchronization capabilities over local area networks (LANs), is a welcome addition to data acquisition networks," stated Sunderraju Ramachandran, program manager at Frost and Sullivan, a leading market research company. "With an initial introduction to the IEEE 1588 technology community, it should be well received by the test & measurement, military, aerospace, industrial automation and networked sensor markets."

Symmetricom's new XLi IEEE 1588 Grandmaster clock was displayed at the 2005 IEEE 1588 Conference sponsored by The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the Instrumentation and Measurement Society of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) on October 10-12, 2005 in Winterthur, Switzerland.

Related Links
Symmetricom
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Satellite Navigation to Play More Integral Role Due to Air and Waterway Crowding
Oyster Bay NY (SPX) Oct 12, 2005
Satellite-based navigation systems for aviation and marine applications are a relatively small market, but one that will become increasingly important as more and more aircraft and vessels crowd the planet's air and sea lanes.







  • 'Star Trek' Actor's Remains To Be Blasted Into Space With Fans' Tributes
  • Tokyo Shortly To Decide On Participation In Russian Kliper Project
  • Northrop Grumman-Boeing Team Unveils Plans For Space Shuttle Successor
  • NASA's Centennial Challenges Collaborates With Foundation

  • New Web Site Features "Live" Images From Mars
  • Making a List, Checking It Twice
  • Opportunity Backs Out Of Potentially Sticky Situation
  • Learning To Work In The Suit

  • European Rocket Sends French Military Satellite Aloft
  • Syracuse 3A And Galaxy 15 To Launch October 13
  • ESA Begins Cryosat Launch Failure Probe
  • Russia To Reduce Military At Cosmodrome

  • The Next Generation Blue Marble
  • Wetlands Satellite Mapping Scheme Yielding First Results
  • Interview With Volker Liebig On The Loss Of Cryosat
  • Ice Satellite Loss Was A Disaster, Say Scientists

  • The PI's Perspective: Changes in Latitude
  • New Class of Satellites Discovered As Moon Discovered Orbiting 10th Planet
  • Tenth Planet Has A Moon
  • NASA'S Pluto Space Probe Begins Launch Preparations

  • Lady In Red: Andromeda Galaxy Shines In Spitzer's Eyes
  • HETE-2 Satellite Solves Mystery Of Cosmic Explosions
  • It Takes Three Smithsonian Observatories To Decipher One Mystery Object
  • Our Three-Brane Existence

  • The Da Vinci Glow
  • NASA Selects Team To Build Lunar Lander
  • SMART-1 Set For More Lunar Science
  • Not Your Average Moonshot

  • Symmetricom Announces First IEEE 1588 Network Grandmaster Clock
  • Satellite Navigation to Play More Integral Role Due to Air and Waterway Crowding
  • Navman Expands Its GPS Receiver Product Line With The New Jupiter 21
  • CPS Partners To Play Key Role In Improving Galileo System Performance

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement