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#11
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#12
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On Jul 24, 11:52*pm, Alfaest wrote:
'Steve Leonard[_2_ Wrote: ;777762']Got my first experience with GPS Jamming. *Apparently, lots of truckers on I-35 near the Kansas-Oklahoma border were jamming today. I would go from 8 satellites showing on my GPS Nav Display (Cambridge Model 20 GPS) to none, lost distance to turnpoint, lost ground track, lost bearing to turnpoint in the blink of an eye. *Typically, after a minute or two, the GPS Nav would resume navigation with three satellites showing. *It would in rather short order (10-15 seconds) get back up to tracking 8 satellites. *Repeat process in 2-5 minutes. I am assuming this was GPS jamming, as nobody else flying from Sunflower reported any sort of issues, and it only happened in this one stretch along I-35. *Interestingly enough, it happend only once (I think ) after I crossed to the east side or I-35. *Maybe I was just far enough from the jammers. My flight is uploaded to OLC. *If you download it and watch it in any playback, you will see me stop, then jump forward. *This particular GPS has worked perfectly before and since. *It was only this one brief section of one leg of the flight. *Of course, it really gets your attention when your display goes all dashes, and the computer says "GPS Wait". Anyone else had an "encounter" like this? Just curious Steve Leonard Nimbus 3 VJS The GPS jamming device is really a kind of gadget that block the signal of a GPS unit. I hit upon a website that sells lots of jammers like the cell phone jammer and GPS jammer, it ishttp://www.jammerall.com/, you can go there and take a look , it's really funny. -- Alfaest This product can send mess codes to create interference to block signals from the GSP satellites and the typical jamming range is 10 to 20 meters. 10-20 meters? how would that jam my GPS in a glider at altitude? |
#13
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On Jul 25, 8:30*am, glidergeek wrote:
On Jul 24, 11:52*pm, Alfaest wrote: 'Steve Leonard[_2_ Wrote: ;777762']Got my first experience with GPS Jamming. *Apparently, lots of truckers on I-35 near the Kansas-Oklahoma border were jamming today. I would go from 8 satellites showing on my GPS Nav Display (Cambridge Model 20 GPS) to none, lost distance to turnpoint, lost ground track, lost bearing to turnpoint in the blink of an eye. *Typically, after a minute or two, the GPS Nav would resume navigation with three satellites showing. *It would in rather short order (10-15 seconds) get back up to tracking 8 satellites. *Repeat process in 2-5 minutes. I am assuming this was GPS jamming, as nobody else flying from Sunflower reported any sort of issues, and it only happened in this one stretch along I-35. *Interestingly enough, it happend only once (I think ) after I crossed to the east side or I-35. *Maybe I was just far enough from the jammers. My flight is uploaded to OLC. *If you download it and watch it in any playback, you will see me stop, then jump forward. *This particular GPS has worked perfectly before and since. *It was only this one brief section of one leg of the flight. *Of course, it really gets your attention when your display goes all dashes, and the computer says "GPS Wait". Anyone else had an "encounter" like this? Just curious Steve Leonard Nimbus 3 VJS The GPS jamming device is really a kind of gadget that block the signal of a GPS unit. I hit upon a website that sells lots of jammers like the cell phone jammer and GPS jammer, it ishttp://www.jammerall.com/, you can go there and take a look , it's really funny. -- Alfaest This product can send mess codes to create interference to block signals from the GSP satellites and the typical jamming range is 10 to 20 meters. 10-20 meters? how would that jam *my GPS in a glider at altitude?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The GPS signal from the satellites is a very low amplitude psuedo- random-noise signal. It doesn't take much to make it unusable. A choke ring antenna would probably eliminate the problem if you always flew wings level, but that's not going to happen, is it? |
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On Jul 24, 4:12*pm, Bill D wrote:
On Jul 24, 12:44*pm, Greg Arnold wrote: On 7/24/2011 11:29 AM, T wrote: On Jul 24, 9:12 am, *wrote: On Jul 24, 11:57 am, *wrote: "Got my first experience with GPS Jamming. *Apparently, lots of truckers on I-35 near the Kansas-Oklahoma border were jamming today". What kind of equipment do you think these truckers were using to jam with? Cheap. *Google.... I've seen intermittent loss of GPS signal at low altitude twice this Summer... now I know why. *In both cases I was very close to a highway. Things that make you go "grrrrrrrrrrr." -Evan Ludeman / T8 I know of no equipment carried by truckers that jam GPS. The FCC and others would be very interested. T Why would truckers want to jam GPS? *Also, I did a Google search, and I only see jammers that work within 30 feet. From "The Economist": "Such devices are illegal to sell or use, but they have become popular with commercial drivers who object to their employers tracking their every move. A jammer prevents a tracking device in the vehicle from determining (and then reporting) its location and speed—but it also disrupts GPS signals for others nearby." Link to full article. http://www.economist.com/node/18304246 |
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On 7/25/2011 4:24 PM, Papa3 wrote:
From "The Economist": "Such devices are illegal to sell or use, but they have become popular with commercial drivers who object to their employers tracking their every move. A jammer prevents a tracking device in the vehicle from determining (and then reporting) its location and speed—but it also disrupts GPS signals for others nearby." Link to full article. http://www.economist.com/node/18304246 I still don't understand this -- are trucking companies so dense that they can't figure out that one of their drivers is jamming the GPS signal? Seems like a driver who jams the signal would soon be looking for a new job. |
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On Jul 25, 8:38*pm, Greg Arnold wrote:
On 7/25/2011 4:24 PM, Papa3 wrote: *From "The Economist": "Such devices are illegal to sell or use, but they have become popular with commercial drivers who object to their employers tracking their every move. A jammer prevents a tracking device in the vehicle from determining (and then reporting) its location and speed—but it also disrupts GPS signals for others nearby." Link to full article.http://www.economist.com/node/18304246 I still don't understand this -- are trucking companies so dense that they can't figure out that one of their drivers is jamming the GPS signal? *Seems like a driver who jams the signal would soon be looking for a new job. Many of the trucking outfits use "contract"drivers who don't work directly for them and have little control over what they do, for them the GPS tracking is more of a "where is the load now" deal... |
#17
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Whatever you do, you want to do it by yourself. Whatever you think, you think about it in your mind. Whatever you have said, you say what you think is right. It is your right to keep all that about you secret. If there is someone steals them and cheats you by the way, if there is someone spies you and control you, you will not have the free right to achieve what you want to. What will you choose to do? Stay there to be ordered about or take courage to fight with them. so come to http://www.jammerall.com/ to buy a GPS signal jammer, it will defeat all your enemies and get back the right and time that belongs to you. Believe it or not, these stores do have the magic to solve your problem. i have benefit a lot from it. |
#18
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it is really cool with a cell phone signal jammer.Your cell phone perhaps is giving out your secrets in face with the attack of cell phone tracking devices. What can be done to ensure the information security? Fortunately, the mobile phone jammers help us to come over the troublesome problem.A friend of mine who is a teacher was once annoyed by his students texting short messages during class, and later he bought a portable cell phone jammer, then all the students were confused that their cell phones cannot receive any signals even if it was the most advanced one.there are so charms of it.LOL...BTW,my friend said he bought it from online http://www.jammerall.com/ , and I checked some sites about that certain item. It's so funny that I'm thinking of purchasing one as well. |
#19
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#20
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But for now I just bought a cell phone jammer for my own use from http://www.jammerall.com/ , it helps really much when I feel fed up with the cell phone noise. |
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