Specifications
Differential and RTK Operations  45
Differential and RTK 
initialization. This carrier phase initialization is only necessary following power-on, 
or after the receiver has lost lock on the satellites (e.g. after passing under a bridge). 
The receiver performs carrier phase initialization automatically. The receiver does not 
have to be stationary while initializing. Once the receiver is initialized it will provide 
centimeter-level accuracy, while moving, in real time. The time for carrier phase 
initialization is a few seconds up to several minutes, depending on baseline length, 
number of satellites in view, and required reliability; these are discussed in the next 
section.
During the carrier phase initialization the receiver is said to be in "float" mode, once 
initialization is complete the receiver is said to be in "fixed" mode. This terminology 
derives from computer terminology: floating-point numbers (real numbers) and fixed 
numbers (integers).
When in float mode the accuracy will range from Differential accuracy (1m) down to 
sub-decimeter. The longer the receiver has been in float mode the higher the 
accuracy. Convergence time is a function of baseline length and number of satellites 
in view. When the receiver fixes integers, accuracy makes a quantum change to 
centimeter level.
The POS and GGA messages have fields which indicate whether the receiver is in 
float or fixed mode.
Carrier Phase Initialization
The time required for carrier phase initialization is a function of base-remote baseline 
length, number of satellites in view, satellite geometry, and required reliability. With 
a large number of satellites in view (
≥
7), initialization time can be as low as a few 
seconds. With fewer satellites in view, the receiver takes as long as necessary to 
guarantee the required reliability.
Reliability
The process of carrier phase initialization has a non-zero probability of error. If an 
error is made the receiver will fix the integers to the wrong value. This will result in 
floating point accuracy (typically between 10cm and 1m). After an error in fixing 
integers the receiver automatically detects and corrects the error when the satellite 
geometry changes. This may be as soon as a new satellite comes into view, or, in the 
worst case, when the satellites move by a few degrees in the sky, which can take from 
one to more than 10 minutes.
You can control the reliability that the receiver provides, this indirectly controls the 
speed of carrier phase initialization. The higher the reliability the longer it takes to fix 
integers. 
The receiver offers three modes for ambiguity fixing:
a. Fixed solution, formal reliability = 90%
b. Fixed solution, formal reliability = 95%










