Instruction manual
Page C-2 Z-12 Real-Time Sensor Operation and Reference Manual
Carrier Phase Differential (CPD)
In CPD mode, the pseudo-range and carrier phase measurement data, which are coded 
in a DBEN message format, or RTCM Types 18 and 19, are transmitted from the base 
station to the rover station. This allows the rover station to compute very accurate 
differentially corrected positions. 
The real-time Z system utilizes Ashtechβs PNAV data processing engine, which 
processes the raw measurement data from both base receiver and the rover in double-
difference form. Double-difference processing, widely used in post-processing 
geodetic surveying software, can achieve state-of-the-art differential GPS accuracy: 
less than a centimeter.
On-the-Fly Ambiguity Resolution
The most important feature of the real-time Z system is its ability to resolve the cycle 
integer ambiguities of the carrier phase measurements while the rover station is 
moving, thus the term βon-the-flyβ. With a PDOP less than two, and five or more 
common satellites in view of the base and rover stations, real-time Z can achieve 
centimeter-level accuracy very quickly, typically in less than a minute.
Fast Carrier Phase Differential
Another important feature of real-time Z is the fast CPD algorithm which reduces the 
position solution latency, or delay. 
Whether pseudo-range or carrier phase differential GPS, the most accurate solution is 
obtained by processing the matched time-tag data from both the base station and the 
rover station. This is not a problem in post-processing, since all of the raw data is 
recorded in the files. For real-time applications using carrier phase differential (CPD), 
the position solution could be delayed up to 2 seconds. This is due to the extra data 
processing required and the latency of the radio data link. This slight delay is 
acceptable for most applications such as static point surveying, but may not be 
acceptable for certain vehicle navigation and kinematic surveying applications.
To reduce the position solution latency, the sensor incorporates a fast CPD algorithm 
which utilizes differential correction, commonly used in pseudo-range differential 
GPS, as well as an optimized data processing, reducing the CPD solution delay to 
about 100 milliseconds. With fast CPD, a real-time rover can produce position 
solutions up to 5 Hz, and each epoch solution is independent, not extrapolated or 
interpolated. 
Vector and Reverse Vector Processing
The most commonly used real-time differential GPS operation is to place one receiver 
at a known position to serve as the base station. The base station transmits its raw 










