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#21
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Jose wrote:
I think WAAS combined with DGPS will soon provide digital accuracy... What is "digital accuracy"? LOL! I guess you got me on that one. I meant to imply that there is no practical limit of the accuracy of digital gauges while analog gauges are severely limited, comparatively. ----- - gpsman |
#22
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Recently, Mxsmanic posted:
WAAS isn't part of GPS. That comment may be helpful in a GPS newsgroup where the technology is discussed in the absence of any application, however, in an aviation newsgroup, discussions of GPS are primarily about the application, and in that context WAAS is inseparable from GPS; in other words, in aviation there is no application for WAAS independent GPS AFAIK. So, your above claim is extremely off-topic, at best. Neil |
#23
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I meant to imply that there is no practical limit of the accuracy of
digital gauges while analog gauges are severely limited, comparatively. Uh... the accuracy of a measurement is independent of the method used to present the result. An extremely accurate result can be presented using analog gauges, and can be presented faithfully. (just add verniers and more hands). An extremely poor result can be presented using digital gauges, and can be presented in such a way to appear very precise. (altitude 3631.567298 feet, +/- 100 feet). Jose -- "Never trust anything that can think for itself, if you can't see where it keeps its brain." (chapter 10 of book 3 - Harry Potter). for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#24
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Mxsmanic wrote:
gpsman writes: Altitude has always been very important to field soldiers and "ships" whose responsibilities include flinging large projectiles long distances. The altitude of a ship is sea level. The altitude of an infantry unit is marked on its maps. The altimeter/GPS altitude accuracy debate is beyond my expertise but my experience includes a different altimeter indication after landing at an airport I had left earlier in the day while my handheld $150 WAAS capable GPSr indicated its identical reading to 1/10ft. WAAS isn't part of GPS. Barometric altimeters are analog and the finest divisions of the scale IME are 20', so I would not expect them to be any more accurate than +- 10'. I think WAAS combined with DGPS will soon provide digital accuracy... far beyond any ordinary need. There's nothing inherently accurate about digital systems. No digital system can be more accurate than the best analog system. "Both horizontal and vertical changes in position can be measured to an accuracy of a few millimeters (horizontal) to several millimeters (vertical). http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/About/What...ation/GPS.html Not in a tenth of a second. You can average readings over long periods and get extremely accurate measurements, but that technique is useless to aircraft. The GPS altitude accuracy "problem" is mostly attributable to the limitations and generality of the WGS84 datum geoid height http://www.colorado.edu/geography/gc...gif/geoid2.gif which could have easily been overcome by WAAS correction and simply adding more satellites (and postioning them optimally). Economics have precluded this rush to solution. The problem is linked to the basic design of the system. The bottom line is, IMO, WAAS altitude is far more accurate than altimeter... depending on how many birds are in view. WAAS isn't part of GPS. Once again your most certainly wrong. WAAS is very much a part of the GPS SYSTEM and your statements to the contrary just reinforce your incredible ignorance of the real world as opposed to your simulated world. |
#25
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Recently, Neil Gould posted:
aviation there is no application for WAAS independent GPS AFAIK. Of course, that *should* read "...independent of GPS..." |
#26
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Jules wrote:
Ron Lee wrote: GPS provides a far better navigation, positioning and timing service globally, free than anything he or his country has done. He's American. Are you talking about GLONASS being better? I thought he was European. Ron Lee |
#27
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"Neil Gould" wrote:
Recently, Mxsmanic posted: WAAS isn't part of GPS. That comment may be helpful in a GPS newsgroup where the technology is discussed in the absence of any application, however, in an aviation newsgroup, discussions of GPS are primarily about the application, and in that context WAAS is inseparable from GPS; in other words, in aviation there is no application for WAAS independent GPS AFAIK. So, your above claim is extremely off-topic, at best. Neil Actually he is correct. WAAS is not part of GPS. You don't need WAAS to use GPS for aviation. Ron Lee |
#28
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![]() "Ron Lee" wrote in message ... Jules wrote: Ron Lee wrote: GPS provides a far better navigation, positioning and timing service globally, free than anything he or his country has done. He's American. Are you talking about GLONASS being better? I thought he was European. Ron Lee No he is just an American that lives in France on $637/Mo. |
#29
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![]() "Ron Lee" wrote in message ... "Neil Gould" wrote: Recently, Mxsmanic posted: WAAS isn't part of GPS. That comment may be helpful in a GPS newsgroup where the technology is discussed in the absence of any application, however, in an aviation newsgroup, discussions of GPS are primarily about the application, and in that context WAAS is inseparable from GPS; in other words, in aviation there is no application for WAAS independent GPS AFAIK. So, your above claim is extremely off-topic, at best. Neil Actually he is correct. WAAS is not part of GPS. You don't need WAAS to use GPS for aviation. Ron Lee Do you know of an aviation use of WAAS that isn't tied to GPS? That is the issue. |
#30
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No, but you need GPS to use WAAS, which enhances GPS accuracy in most,
but not all, of the continental USA. In that sense WAAS is certainly part, albeit a newer part, of the GPS system. Actually he is correct. WAAS is not part of GPS. You don't need WAAS to use GPS for aviation. Ron Lee |
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