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I posted earlier about seeing differences of up to 500' between the
altitude shown on my Garmin GPS 196 (even while receiving WAAS) and my altimeter. The GPS would consistently indicate higher than the altimeter. Dan Luke suggested the cause might be non-standard temperatures. After some more experimenting, I think Dan was correct. On a flight last week, the GPS altitude and altimeter matched within 20 feet. The temperature was close to standard, which made me think that temperature might be in fact be the culprit as Dan suspected. I did another trip over the weekend and found the GPS reading high for altitude again, and the temperatures were above standard. Here's what I got.... SATURDAY SUNDAY Indicated Altitude 7500 8500 GPS Altitude 7700 8677 Pressure Altitude 7350 8310 True Altitude 7700 8700 Density Altitude 8200 9100 Altimeter setting 30.07 30.11 Temp (C) +8 +5 Std Temp (C) 0 -2 So it looks like the GPS is showing True Altitude (which makes a lot of sense). True altitude is the actual height above MSL, and that will differ from indicated altitude when the temperature is not standard, or you forget to change your altimeter setting. The true altitude numbers above were calculated using my good old-fashioned E6B. So the GPS is showing the right value. However, that value is different than what you altimeter shows when the temperature is not standard. When temperatures are above standard, the GPS altitude will be higher than indicated and when termperatures are below standard the GPS altitude will show lower than indicated. Does this make sense? I wonder how this will affect the upcoming WAAS LPV approaches. They are going to have a decision altitude based on indicated altitude, not true altitude. How will the difference between true altitude and indicated altitude affect the approach, since the GPS will be giving vertical guidance based on true altitude? Phil www.pfactor.com |
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