Actually, now that I looked at it closer, there is something SERIOUSLY wrong with the time.
Here I am sending
:SYSTem:TIME?
once per second continuously and this is the response:
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,6,44
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,6,45
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,6,46
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,6,47
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,7,48
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,7,49
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,7,50
A minutes later:
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,7,47
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,7,48
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,8,49
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,8,50
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,8,51
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,8,52
Another minute later:
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,8,46
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,8,47
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,8,48
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,8,49
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,9,50
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,9,51
A few minutes later:
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,16,49
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,16,50
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,16,51
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,16,52
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,16,53
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,17,54
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,17,55
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,17,56
A couple minutes later:
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,18,52
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,18,53
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,18,54
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,18,55
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,19,56
:SYSTem:TIME?
1,19,57
Is it keeping time wrong? Is it rolling over on the wrong second? Does the rollover second advance by one when I issue a SCPI command to read the time? What the heck is going on?!