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#1
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Now that my SPOT unit has arrived and I got to fly with it yesterday,
I have some thoughts. 1. Do we have any good contacts with the company? I think some modifications could be very useful for the soaring community. The recent Australian Gran Prix was nice, but track every 2 to 3 minutes would have made it much more fun. The SPOT being "push" technology would be very easy to modify to send a tracking signal on a shorter interval than the current 10 minute cycle. With about 25% of the signals missed this would still give a great way to watch races from the ground. I think it would be great to work with the SPOT people to allow us to do this for short periods, like contest and then switch back to 10 minutes when just normally flying xc. I assume the many of the smart EE's on this list could figure out how to mod a SPOT unit to send more often. We could also install an external battery supply so that the two AA's would be only needed outside of the planes. |
#2
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Tim:
It's my understanding (but this might be wrong!) that the SPOT transmits its position every thirty seconds or so but this is only picked up when one of the satellites transits overhead within signal view. If this is indeed the case, the limitation is the number of satellites, which could be harder to increase than transmit power! I certainly agree on its usefulness. I never travel anywhere by light plane, glider, boot or mountain bike without it now. Mike |
#3
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On Dec 8, 2:11*pm, Mike the Strike wrote:
Tim: It's my understanding (but this might be wrong!) that the SPOT transmits its position every thirty seconds or so but this is only picked up when one of the satellites transits overhead within signal view. *If this is indeed the case, the limitation is the number of satellites, which could be harder to increase than transmit power! I certainly agree on its usefulness. *I never travel anywhere by light plane, glider, boot or mountain bike without it now. Mike Nope the 30 second thing is wrong. The GlobalStar satellites have very good coverage (but not worldwide). The image of Satellites zipping by and having significant time gaps in the coverage is not really correct. If they had to transmit every 30 seconds to get one message every 10 minutes they would have serious problems. One of the reasons that really fast updates are not offered is the increase in message collisions that could start occurring in their system. The other reason may be marketing, If I was providing high resolution satellite tracking with rapid updates it would be at a lot more than the current SPOT prices. BTW discussions of GlobalStar coverage will likely run into lots of things about their GlobalStar satellite communications reliability. GlobalStar have been facing lots of issues with the degradations of their S-band amplifiers used for voice. The SPOT and other simplex devices use their L-Band network which appears very reliable. Also agree SPOT is very useful, I always use mine for trackin when flying. Darryl |
#4
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On Dec 8, 2:25*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Dec 8, 2:11*pm, Mike the Strike wrote: Tim: It's my understanding (but this might be wrong!) that the SPOT transmits its position every thirty seconds or so but this is only picked up when one of the satellites transits overhead within signal view. *If this is indeed the case, the limitation is the number of satellites, which could be harder to increase than transmit power! I certainly agree on its usefulness. *I never travel anywhere by light plane, glider, boot or mountain bike without it now. Mike Nope the 30 second thing is wrong. The GlobalStar satellites have very good coverage (but not worldwide). The image of Satellites zipping by and having significant time gaps in the coverage is not really *correct. If they had to transmit every 30 seconds to get one message every 10 minutes they would have serious problems. One of the reasons that really fast updates are not offered is the increase in message collisions that could start occurring in their system. The other reason may be marketing, If I was providing high resolution satellite tracking with rapid updates it would be at a lot more than the current SPOT prices. BTW discussions of GlobalStar coverage will likely run into lots of things about their GlobalStar satellite communications reliability. GlobalStar have been facing lots of issues with the degradations of their S-band amplifiers used for voice. The SPOT and other simplex devices use their L-Band network which appears very reliable. Also agree SPOT is very useful, I always use mine for trackin when flying. Darryl They have 48 satellites at 1400 km orbits. That plus the fact that the constellation was architected to support voice and duplex data communications would indicate that you wouldn't have to wait long at all for a bird to be in view - in fact, most of the time you should have at least two. I don't know what the bandwidth of L-band is, but I'd be surprised if SPOT is taxing the capacity. Lee Kuhlke talks to the SPOT guys regularly and has given lots of input. I'm sure he could get an answer on tracking intervals. I recall him saying something about a shorter interval being in the works. 9B |
#5
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On Mon, 8 Dec 2008 10:01:29 -0800 (PST), Tim Taylor
wrote: The recent Australian Gran Prix was nice, but track every 2 to 3 minutes would have made it much more fun. If I understand correctly, SPOT reports position, but no altitude. Is it true? If so, I see very little potential for competition tracking. Aldo |
#6
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On Dec 9, 4:44*am, cernauta wrote:
On Mon, 8 Dec 2008 10:01:29 -0800 (PST), Tim Taylor wrote: The recent Australian Gran Prix was nice, but track every 2 to 3 minutes would have made it much more fun. If I understand correctly, SPOT reports position, but no altitude. Is it true? If so, I see very little potential for competition tracking. Aldo The goal would not be to replace the current gps loggers, but to provide real-time data back to the soaring site and the world to watch competitions. In areas where there is very little cell coverage this would be the only means for tracking a contest. Some sites in Europe have been able to use cell based systems, other sites have placed a receiver in a plane that acts as a relay site. The SPOT systems could give relative positions currently as you said, but I am sure in the near future the altitude data could be sent as well. Again this is part of opening communications with the company. If there is a need and a market most companies are interested in selling their products. Most products change by innovation, newer generations have additional features. |
#7
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Here's an example (Posted by Mal Bruce on the Aus-Soaring newsgroup)
of newer and more expensive technology, logging flights for a charity event for ALS (Lou Gehrig's Disease). Tracplus has a variety of tracker hardware options, but they are more vehicle based than personal devices. At the moment the SPOT device is good for what it's designed, and will get better. Jim http://www.alsworldflight.com/media.php 2 Women, 7 Days, 1 World Record for ALS The current Dash for a Cure World Speed Attempt Trackplus onboard Spot onboard and another GPS GSM system onboard https://web.daestra.com/maps/application.html public public You can pull up the historical data on the above link by date for the Grand Prix tracker renamed Aerotrac 01 http://share.findmespot.com/shared/f...f00ab811bf4386 Spot link for the mooney http://www.aerotrac.com.au/images/ne...hermal%202.jpg http://www.aerotrac.com.au/images/ne...hermal%201.jpg http://www.tracplus.co.nz/NAL9601-DGS-LP.aspx http://www.aerotrac.com.au/news.htm |
#8
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On Dec 9, 3:44*am, cernauta wrote:
On Mon, 8 Dec 2008 10:01:29 -0800 (PST), Tim Taylor wrote: The recent Australian Gran Prix was nice, but track every 2 to 3 minutes would have made it much more fun. If I understand correctly, SPOT reports position, but no altitude. Is it true? If so, I see very little potential for competition tracking. Aldo SPOT does not currently report altitude. That would be useful for a lot more uses in our sport than just competition tracking. The underlying GlobalStar simplex links support extended multi-packet data transfer beyond the limited data space in the packets used today. So in principle this is all possible for SPOT to do in future. For signaling location and tracking glider flights, etc. SPOT is still extremely useful today. Axonn the company that makes the SPOT and all other GlobalStar simplex data devices have products that would enable build a custom solution to be built for more advanced tracking. Iridium has products as well (works differently and usually more expensive). If I was SPOT and building a product to report altitude for the aviation market, it would cost significantly more than current SPOT messenger and subscription prices. Darryl |
#9
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On Dec 9, 11:03*am, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Dec 9, 3:44*am, cernauta wrote: On Mon, 8 Dec 2008 10:01:29 -0800 (PST), Tim Taylor wrote: The recent Australian Gran Prix was nice, but track every 2 to 3 minutes would have made it much more fun. If I understand correctly, SPOT reports position, but no altitude. Is it true? If so, I see very little potential for competition tracking. Aldo SPOT does not currently report altitude. That would be useful for a lot more uses in our sport than just competition tracking. The underlying GlobalStar simplex links support extended multi-packet data transfer beyond the limited data space in the packets used today. So in principle this is all possible for SPOT to do in future. For signaling location and tracking glider flights, etc. SPOT is still extremely useful today. Axonn the company that makes the SPOT and all other GlobalStar simplex data devices have products that would enable build a custom solution to be built for more advanced tracking. Iridium has products as well (works differently and usually more expensive). If I was SPOT and building a product to report altitude for the aviation market, it would cost significantly more than current SPOT messenger and subscription prices. Darryl That may be the rub. The small size of the soaring market and the oft- demonstrated price elasticity of demand among its piots may make it impossible to cover the development and incremental operating costs. |
#10
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![]() One of our pilots has been in contact with the folks at SPOT several times. He has some good recommendations on things that could improve SPOT's service to the soaring community, but they recognize that ours is not a large population. They are selling more subscriptions to hikers and rockclimbers than they are to soaring pilots, I guess. Anyway, his contact there is . Soaring pilots with specific recommendations on how to make SPOT more useful for our community might want to be in contact with Bennett. Fred LaSor SoaringNV Minden, NV |
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