Can you T the existing? These cables are waveguides, so I don't think so. That and the new one is WAAS. Doesn't a WAAS GPS require a different type of antenna?
Also, at least some GPS antenna are "active" antenna's. Not sure what that means, but if they transmit as well as receive there may be an issue.
WAAS uses the same frequencies as the regular GPS L1 signal.
Active GPS antennas don't transmit. The "active" means they have a built in RF amplifier right at the antenna, and require power down the coax from the radio to run that amp. The signal levels from the GPS satellites run in the range of around -157 dbW on L1 and it's just so tiny that having the amp right at the antenna helps.
Once the GPS Block III satellites are operational, both a civilian L2 and an essentially aviation only use L5 signal should make the need for the WAAS signal rapidly obsolete. Measurements of ionospheric delay should be possible in a so-called "dual receiver" user GPS directly and the augmentation provided by WAAS today to make the signal usable for precision approaches, should be able to be done inside the receiver.
Other improvements in the Block III systems include the ability for any satellite to announce that something's wrong with its own signal within six seconds, and piles of mathematical signal strength improvements. The military kids even get spot beams for about a -20 dB better margin to a specific area of the planet to help with counteracting jamming activity, amongst other things.
USAF is way behind schedule and massively over budget on the ground updates but are hopeful they'll get it done by the end of this year. OMB points out that they're not optimistic, considering the "mainframe style" original control system having only been decommissioned at Schreivener AFB in 2009 for the current ground control systems.
I think in layman' speech this equates to "We're going to need a lot more money."
(When don't they, really? Seen anything hit a timeline or budget in your lifetime?)
Once the ground systems are done and the Block III satellites (and some of the Block II that can also handle some of the new signal types get to play also) are aloft, it's anyone's guess as to how long before FAA and other aviation authorities certify the dual receive systems. It looks like it will be a good long while. Unknown also as to what the market will do as far as utilizing Glonass and Galileo systems simultaneously with GPS signals. No particular technical challenges in using more than one, other than cost, including certification, at the user end of things. Probably not a lot of benefit, either. But they're there. Or getting there.
Even with all these new toys, better signal strength and accuracy, the system still won't be able to do Cat-III approach levels of accuracy. There hasn't been much news on the LAAS (Local Area Augmentation System) front to make GPS receivers accurate enough for that. Probably because there's an economic breakpoint where an ILS just is cheaper and easier and still works with everything a Cat-III equipped aircraft already has on board.
ILS looks like it'll continue to have a long and happy life for a very long time. At least in Civil aviation.
^^ None of the above includes the new military signal which probably has some nifty tricks up its sleeve, but isn't generally going to be used by the public. The spot beam antennas are a nifty trick, considering they have to move and track, unlike what most folks think of spot beams from high gain antennas in geosynchronous orbits like the TV folks use. Those generally don't move. They're fixed. The Block III sats have to do some nifty antenna tricks to point those antennas at a particular place or places on the planet as they fly by. Nothing NRO hasn't been "speculated" to be doing for quite a while, but it's the first really large scale project where it's been mentioned in public as a major feature. Even if it is only targeted (see what I did there?) at the mil crowd.
Heck, in MilAv, at the rate avionics get swapped out and upgraded, the drones will have all these new receivers on board, long before the human flown assets. Logically the spot beams and higher signal strengths and more anti-jamming tech, points right straight to the "needs" on board a drone for command and control. As do the new message blocks in the frames.
Skynet needs reliable Comm AND Nav. Heh. Go figure.