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#1
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Where online can I find a list of countries meeting the WGS-84 GPS
standards? Preferably from an "authoritative" source, such as FAA, AOPA, ALPA, NASA, etc, and not from Cousin Vinnies online website thanks BILL |
#2
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![]() "Bill" wrote in message m... Where online can I find a list of countries meeting the WGS-84 GPS standards? WGS-84 is not a GPS standard, but the Earth model for great circle long range navigation. |
#3
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![]() "Bill" wrote in message m... "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Bill" wrote in message m... Where online can I find a list of countries meeting the WGS-84 GPS standards? WGS-84 is not a GPS standard, but the Earth model for great circle long range navigation. Good job Tarver, now how about that website I use the RTCA document. |
#4
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#5
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![]() Tarver Engineering wrote: "Bill" wrote in message m... "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Bill" wrote in message m... Where online can I find a list of countries meeting the WGS-84 GPS standards? WGS-84 is not a GPS standard, but the Earth model for great circle long range navigation. Good job Tarver, now how about that website I use the RTCA document. You really can be both obtuse and difficult. WGS-84 compliance by country is a very practical concern for someone actually involved in flight operations, which you've made quite clear you're not. |
#6
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![]() "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... You are going to have to help me out on how a Country is compliant with a trig equation. John P. Tarver, MS/PE It's not "just" a trig equation. WGS-84 stands for World Geodetic Survey - 1984. That "trig equation" as you call it is actually the reference datum for surveys and is only a small part of the WGS-84 standard. It applies to any survey data, not just aviation data. A survey is a legal document and to be legal it must be made in reference to a legally recognized datum. Before WGS-84, most US surveys were done to various versions of the North American Datum, abbreviated NAD-yy, yy indicating the year. The last one before WGS-84 was NAD-79. In England, the surveys are based on the Ordnance Survey of Great Britain or OSGB datum. LAT/LON of a location surveyed against one datum can be quite a bit different when surveyed against a different datum. So ICAO requires member states to provide their aeronautical survey data referenced to WGS-84, or at least provide for the transformation of the data from another datum to WGS-84. BTW, my handheld Garmin GPS supports 30 or 40 different datum from around the world. The datum is selectable in the setup menu. So a more exact question would be, "Which countries have accepted WGS-84 as a legal datum and provide their survey data referenced to WGS-84?" To get the answer, you would have to search through the ICAO agreements. Start at www.icao.org If you're interested in understanding WGS-84 and datum transformations, start at www.nima.mil |
#7
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![]() How does a country "meet" a standard which is nothing but a mathematical model that describes the configuration of the earth? Kind of like passing a law saying that the North Pole is located in Hawaii. Do that and all but two of the lat long figures have to change, and become "incompatible" with countries which have not adopted this new learning. Actually, we do this all the time. For some people, the North Pole is located in northern Canada. At the same time, for other people, it's located somewhere under the Arctic Circle. And the funny thing is, some people subscribe to both world views simultaneously. Very odd, but that magnetic thing in the window is more useful that way. Jose (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
#8
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![]() Tarver Engineering wrote: You are going to have to help me out on how a Country is compliant with a trig equation. John P. Tarver, MS/PE Maybe you can get some of those folks you hang around with at RTCA, Honeywell, FAA, et al, to help you out. |
#9
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![]() wrote in message ... Tarver Engineering wrote: You are going to have to help me out on how a Country is compliant with a trig equation. Maybe you can get some of those folks you hang around with at RTCA, Honeywell, FAA, et al, to help you out. They all use WGS-84. |
#10
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![]() "Tarver Engineering" wrote in message ... "Bill" wrote in message m... Where online can I find a list of countries meeting the WGS-84 GPS standards? WGS-84 is not a GPS standard, but the Earth model for great circle long range navigation. Upon searching a bit, the best I can find, is that even ICAO doesn't know. I did find an ICAO form from mid-2002, requesting Countries report their complaince status and a couple of articles worrying about African and Caribbean compliance. John P. Tarver, MS/PE |
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