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I had an interesting experience Thursday. I often fly from Baltimore to
Cumberland for business. This past Thursday, I decided to drive. I took my Garmin Nuvi GPS along for the ride. In the vicinity of Hagerstown (Maryland) the GPS went tango uniform. The screen worked, but the unit indicated that satellite reception was lost. A few minutes later, the GPS came back on, but then quickly died. On the way back to Baltimore late Thursday morning, the unit remained nonfunctional. The satellite reception page showed absolutely no signal from any bird. I tried wiggling the little antenna panel, thinking that perhaps the antenna failed. I have a spare antenna from my 295 which I thought I could use to test the receiver function. I tried recycling the GPS, but nothing worked. The unit went through its startup procedure, inquiring about relocation since last use, etc. Even when reception is poor, the satellite page always shows some level of signal unless the unit is indoors. There was nothing. I left the unit on at the satellite page, primarily because I was too lazy to reach up and turn it off. As I was coming down the ridge towards Frederick (east), the unit lit up, and worked perfectly since, up through today. For those of you not familiar with this area of the country, P-40 or Camp David is a little north of the route I was driving, just to the east of Hagerstown. I received an email from AOPA that P-40 was supersized the following day, Friday, indicating presidential or VIP presence. I have seen notams about NAS Pax River spoofing/degrading/screwing with the GPS signal in their vicinity, but I haven't seen anything about a remote interference with the GPS signal (but since I drove, I didn't really check recently, either). So, for those of you (like me) who have become dependent upon GPS, you may want to think about whether the government has a reason to block the signal in the vicinity of your flight. If so, you may wish to make sure those VOR frequencies are handy. The disappearance and reappearance of the signal was so dramatic that my only conclusion is that the signal was blocked locally. |
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