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#61
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Digital systems are merely easier to read in some cases. Most people
nowadays (at least it seems) prefer digital watches. They provide the same accuracy (1 second) but digital gives you a number and in stopwatch mode can give you a number good to several decimal places. I prefer my analog since I don't need that kind of precision for my daily timetracking. It is quicker to read, but if need be, it could be made to give several decimal places of accuracy. I hate digital speedometers in a car. They drive me nuts with the numbers always flipping back and forth. mike "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... If the frequency exists in the real world, the best analog system is at least as good as any digital system. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#62
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mike regish writes:
There was a story a while back (don't know if it's true or not, but sounded legit) that some guy was demonstrating his latest, greatest GPS by using it to taxi into his hangar. It wasn't quite that accurate and the repair bill wasn't cheap. One problem with GPS is that accuracy can be rapidly and significantly degraded by the presence of buildings or mountains or other obstacles that reflect or block signals. This is why GPS isn't likely to be very accurate in the streets of Manhattan. The system itself provides good accuracy, but in order to obtain that accuracy, you have to be able to receive the signals without interference. On the ocean, in the countryside, or in the open sky, you can receive signals very well indeed, but once you are on the ground, the situation changes. Another problem, not actually part of GPS per se, is moving maps. Your GPS position may be accurate, but that doesn't guarantee that the map is accurate. If the mountain on the map is in the wrong place in relation to its real-world position, having high accuracy from GPS won't help you. Very often map errors are more of a problem than errors in the GPS itself. Note that WAAS and LAAS will _not_ compensate for either of the above types of error. Differential GPS systems like this work best when you are at exactly the spot used as a reference for the corrections. If you are anywhere else, the corrections may not be right for your position. The further away you are from the surveyed reference position used to generate the corrections, the more likely it is that your position will be incorrect. Some of these systems also correct for atmospheric and other effects, but here again, the corrections are most useful when you are in the exact position for which they are generated. If the reference point is in Cheyenne and you are in Denver, the corrections may be well off the mark. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#63
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Mxsmanic wrote:
The death rate among GA pilots is 100 times higher than it is among automobile drivers. That's pretty strong evidence of ignorance (but also impulsiveness, a disdain for rules and regulations, and a thirst for risk-taking behavior). Why do you spend life posting this stuff here? Bicycling is infinitely more dangerous than computer gaming. And you complain about personal attacks. F-- |
#64
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mike regish writes:
Digital systems are merely easier to read in some cases. Most people nowadays (at least it seems) prefer digital watches. Are you sure? Every time I look at watches, analog watches (with hands) seem to outnumber the digital ones ten to one, especially at the high end of the price range. The inexpensive watches sometimes have a fair selection of digital styles, but everything above that is analog. Then again, I think that people who spend $5000 for a watch probably don't actually care about telling time, anyway (otherwise, why would they settle for styles that have hands but no numbers, or dials that are only 4 mm across?). The watches that are marketed to engineering and geek types do seem to be digital, but they're a small segment of the market. Casio makes some nice digital, radio-synchronized ("atomic") watches that are solar powered. No batteries, clear digital readout, and accurate to one second in three million years. Ideal if you want accurate timekeeping, and they aren't expensive. If you want to be pretty, Chopard makes a very pretty analog mechanical watch for about $100,000. Of course, it's hard to actually determine the time from the dial, and it's off by six seconds a day .... I hate digital speedometers in a car. They drive me nuts with the numbers always flipping back and forth. If they had three decimal places that wouldn't be a problem, but for some reason they never seem to show fractions of a mile per hour. I'm surprised they are digital at all, given the fondness most people have for analog indications. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#65
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TxSrv writes:
Why do you spend life posting this stuff here? To provide perspective. Bicycling is infinitely more dangerous than computer gaming. Not infinitely so, but significantly so, especially in traffic. I've tried cycling in traffic in Paris, and it's too stressful to be fun. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#66
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Hey! That's what I use. I hand programmed the entire (well, almost) AFD into
it. $127 with a $50 rebate. mike "Nomen Nescio" wrote in message ... -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- And I can't ever remember my cheap little (2000 vintage) Garmin 12xl handheld ever being off more than 100 ft when checked against a topo during a hike or the occasional geocache search. |
#67
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Compared to which standard?
mike "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... The death rate among GA pilots is 100 times higher than it is among automobile drivers. |
#68
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mike regish writes:
Compared to which standard? Fatalities per trip. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#69
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I have actually had a hard time finding a cheap analog watch at times. I
always get the Indiglo face. I notice these days that they (analog) are becoming more prevalent. But it only been the last year or 2. mike "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... mike regish writes: Digital systems are merely easier to read in some cases. Most people nowadays (at least it seems) prefer digital watches. Are you sure? Every time I look at watches, analog watches (with hands) seem to outnumber the digital ones ten to one, especially at the high end of the price range. |
#70
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![]() Mxsmanic wrote: [...] Note that WAAS and LAAS will _not_ compensate for either of the above types of error. Differential GPS systems like this work best when you are at exactly the spot used as a reference for the corrections. If you are anywhere else, the corrections may not be right for your position. The further away you are from the surveyed reference position used to generate the corrections, the more likely it is that your position will be incorrect. While correct for the case of LAAS and DGPS, this is not correct in the case of WAAS. Hint: W != L Regards, Jon |
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