- IRIG timecode
Inter-range instrumentation group time codes, commonly known as "IRIG" timecodes, were created by the TeleCommunications Working Group of the Inter-Range Instrumentation Group, the standards body of the
Range Commanders Council . Work on these standards started in October1956 , and the original standards were accepted in1960 .The original formats were described in IRIG Document 104-60, later revised and reissued in August1970 as IRIG Document 104-70, upgraded later that year as the IRIG Document to the status of a Standard, IRIG Standard 200-70. The latest version of the Standard is IRIG Standard 200-04.The different timecodes defined in the Standard have alphabetic designations. A, B, D, E, G, and H are the standards currently defined by 200-98. C was in the original specification, but was replaced by H. The main difference between codes is their rate, which varies between one pulse per minute and 10,000 pulses per second.
* A: 1000 PPS
* B: 100 PPS
* D: 1 PPM
* E: 10 PPS
* G: 10000 PPS
* H: 1 PPSOther differences are::Form Designation::0) (DCLS) Direct Current Level Shift (width coded):1) Sine wave carrier (amplitude modulated),:2) Manchester modulated
:Carrier Resolution::0) No carrier (DCLS):1) 100 Hz (10 ms resolution):2) 1 kHz (1 ms resolution):3) 10 kHz (100 µs resolution):4) 100 kHz (10 µs resolution):5) 1 MHz (1 µs resolution)
:Coded expressions::0) BCD (
binary-coded decimal Day_of_year, hours, minutes, and (for some formats) seconds and fractions), CF (control functions), SBS (straight binary seconds_of_day):1) BCD, CF:2) BCD:3) BCD, SBS:4) BCD, BCD_Year, CF, SBS:5) BCD, BCD_Year, CF:6) BCD, BCD_Year:7) BCD, BCD_Year, SBSThe recognized combinations according to the standard are:
* A: A000, A003, A130, A132, A133
* B: B000, B003, B120, B122, B123, B150, B152, B153
* D: D001, D002, D111, D112, D121, D122
* E: E001, E002, E111, E112, E121, E122
* G: G001, G002, G141, G142
* H: H001, H002, H111, H112, H121, H122The most commonly used of the standards is IRIG B, then IRIG A, then probably IRIG G. Time code formats directly derived from IRIG H are used by NIST
radio station s WWV,WWVH andWWVB .For example, one of the most common formats, IRIG B122:IRIG B122 transmits one hundred pulses per second on an amplitude modulated 1 kHz sine wave carrier, encoding information in BCD. This means that 100 bits of information are transmitted every second. The time frame for the IRIG B standard is 1 second, meaning that one data frame of time information is transmitted every second. This data frame contains information about year (0-99), the day of the year (1-366), hours, minutes, and seconds. Information as to which century it is, is not transmitted.
Leap second announcements are not provided. Although information is transmitted only once per second, a device can sychronize its time very accurately with the transmitting device by using aphase locked loop . Typical commercial devices will synchronize to within 1 microsecond using IRIG B timecodes.References
* [https://wsmrc2vger.wsmr.army.mil/rcc/manuals/200-04/TT-45.pdf IRIG standard 200-04 (PDF)]
External links
* [http://www.meinberg.de/english/info/irig.htm IRIG information] IRIG information page with diagrams.
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