On Jul 17, 11:50*pm, Ramy wrote:
On Jul 17, 10:34*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Jul 17, 9:08*pm, Hellman wrote:
On Jul 16, 7:48*am, Steve Koerner wrote:
I did a serious investigation on the problem involving some
experiments and analysis and I made a presentation to my local club..
My presentation is available for download from my Wing Rigger website:www.wingrigger.com. *(click Extra Soaring Content in lower right
corner).
Steve,
Thanks for that detailed analysis of SPOT behavior. While it helps in
understanding SPOT generally, my question -- and big concern -- is why
that flight was different from all other flights. I don't believe I've
never had more than a 30 minute gap (2 missed transmissions) before,
yet this time the gap was 90 minutes (8 missed transmissions). I was
asking if anyone else had a track from that specific day and time (JUL
15, 1900-2020 Z) and general location (roughly from Oakland, CA to
Lake Tahoe). If so, I wanted to know if they had coverage or also had
around a 90 minute hole in their data.
Martin
Martin
You want to end the guessing game and tell us where your SPOT
messenger is mounted? *On your harness? On your shoulder? Obstructed
by your head? What is the effective field of view of the antenna?
You were tracking roughly the same heading for all that time. *And
that heading (very) roughly lines up with one of the inclined planes
of the GlobalStar constellation.
The GlobalStar satelites orbit in a interweaved pattern with two
inclined planes at +/- 80 degrees or so (you can see a simulation herehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G8VPEueequMoryou can actually play
with the SaVi software shown in the video, seehttp://savi.sourceforge.net).
It is quite possible that things happen like the satelites flying from
the south west to north east are obscured over your left shoudler if
say your SPOT messenger was to the right side of your head and all
those passes could be obscured and maye the next parallel path to the
east is too far away. That leaves the satellites tracking north-west
to south-east and just maybe again if your head partially obscured
those then the satellite does not see the spot until it is further
overhead and out of the optimal bent-pipe geometry to reach the
Alberta, Canada ground station. So maybe in the whole time you just
get maybe one shot when the SPOT fires off its track message where it
manages to see a satellite to get it a bent path to the Texas ground
station. Maybe you just managed to get things timed so bad that you
never happened to have a satellite with bent-pipe view to any ground
station when your SPOT happened to fire the TRACK message.
This is all very uninteresting if the SPOT messenger is mounted say on
your parachute harness and inclined or significantly obscured. Tell me
it is out flat in the open and I'll actually care.
Darryl- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I don't think I agree with the notion that mounting a spot on the
parachute harness near the shoulder is bad idea. Mine is on the
parachute harness and I get around 10% drops, as good as anyone else
who mounts their Spot perfectly horizontally. I just checked my spot
messages from today: 5 missing messages in 7.5 hours fligh = 10%
Since installing on the parachute harness is the easiest, and provide
easy access during flight, and will stay with you in case of bailout,
I wouldn't recommend against it.
Ramy
But just don't do that and complain about gaps in your SPOT data. So
folks complaining about SPOT problems lets start with where is the
SPOT unit mounted and how much sky can it see? And Ramy you have been
on here complaining about gaps in your SPOT track in the past. I get
less than 10% drops. The next person with slightly more obscuration
who's flight happens to track the satellites in just the wrong way may
get a lot more. If you don't give them a really good sky view you are
going to see gaps in the data. That is your trade-off, just don't be
surprised when it happens.
Maybe Martin's is mounted with a clear sky view.. who knows.
Darryl