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#1
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After uploading my latest flight to the OLC, the server told me that
the file was invalid due to a large time gap between GPS fixes. Both my secure *.cai and *.igc files show no such gap; it only appears on the OLC trace. I've sent an e-mail to the OLC to see what they think, but I'm curious to see if anybody else has had this problem, and what they did to fix it. Thanks in advance! Chris 'CF' OLC-USA 2006-12-04 El Paso Soaring Society Cambridge GPS-NAV Model 20 SeeYou v3.5a (Cambridge patch installed) Previous flights uploaded successfully |
#2
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There is a program that breaks down the fixes and times have you run the IGC
file through that. |
#3
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How have you checked the IGC file for gaps? By loading it into SeeYou?
SeeYou will automatically skip over an out of order fix when displaying a flight. My guess is if you checked the IGC file in detail there is an out of order record. A regular fix will look like this: B1929283318443N11641991WA0121001246000000000000 A bad fix will probably look like this: B1929323318500N11642046WV0121701255000000000000 Note the 'V' after the 'W' , instead of an 'A'. charlie foxtrot wrote: After uploading my latest flight to the OLC, the server told me that the file was invalid due to a large time gap between GPS fixes. Both my secure *.cai and *.igc files show no such gap; it only appears on the OLC trace. I've sent an e-mail to the OLC to see what they think, but I'm curious to see if anybody else has had this problem, and what they did to fix it. Thanks in advance! Chris 'CF' OLC-USA 2006-12-04 El Paso Soaring Society Cambridge GPS-NAV Model 20 SeeYou v3.5a (Cambridge patch installed) Previous flights uploaded successfully |
#4
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What sort of recorder (Manufacturer /exact model)?
Did the IGC file concerned pass the appropriate VALIDATION test program (available free from the IGC GNSS web pages)? Has the IGC file concerned been posted where others can have a look at it? Ian Strachan Lasham Gliding Centre, UK |
#5
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In my last posting, sorry, I missed that the recorder was a Cambridge
20 because you put this under your name rather than in the text. The problems associated with the three legacy Cambridge models 10, 20 and 25 when used for OLC flights, have been extensively discussed on this newsroup. In terms of using the free VALI-CAM.exe program, this only works with the binary CAI file and not with the IGC file that is derived from it. And if you alter the IGC file, the VALI program will register it as invalid because it has been altered. By all means email the files (CAI and IGC) to me and I will look at them with analysis software that enables every fix to be looked at in detail. Some analysis software uses its own algorithms, for instance to average things out. This may mean that some anomalies in fixing are not obvious. As someone else said, you can always look at the B-records in the IGC file itself, but this is better done through analysis software designed to intepret them individually. Ian Strachan Chairman IGC GFA Committee |
#6
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Hi All,
Yep, one of the b-records in my flight was corrupt, look at the log time, shown with first 6 digits behind the B in line 1 time is 21:12:32 in line 2 time is 22:36:00 in line 3 time is 21:12:40, look at the excerpt of Your IGC file below! B2112323234199N10530479WA0334303580000022015000 B2236003402499N10530538WV0336003583000022015208 B2112403234260N10530608WA0338003602000020015000 The OLC did an administrative validation of my flight - THANK YOU OLC! I received an e-mail suggesting to open the B-record in notepad, and deleting the bogus line. Has anybody else tried this? Chris 'CF' |
#7
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charlie foxtrot wrote:
Hi All, Yep, one of the b-records in my flight was corrupt, look at the log time, shown with first 6 digits behind the B in line 1 time is 21:12:32 in line 2 time is 22:36:00 in line 3 time is 21:12:40, look at the excerpt of Your IGC file below! B2112323234199N10530479WA0334303580000022015000 B2236003402499N10530538WV0336003583000022015208 B2112403234260N10530608WA0338003602000020015000 The OLC did an administrative validation of my flight - THANK YOU OLC! I received an e-mail suggesting to open the B-record in notepad, and deleting the bogus line. Has anybody else tried this? Chris 'CF' If you edit the B record, the OLC security check will indicate the file was tampered with, which it was, and give you the dreaded red V. You're not allowed to edit your flight logs. Thats the whole point of the security check. The recorded position fix was "bad", but it was part of the secure flight log in your *.cai file. Your only option is to appeal to whoever is evaluating the log, the OLC in this case, to ignore the obviously bad fix in the log. -Dave ZL |
#8
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![]() I received an e-mail suggesting to open the B-record in notepad, and deleting the bogus line. Has anybody else tried this? Chris 'CF' If you edit the B record, the OLC security check will indicate the file was tampered with, which it was, and give you the dreaded red V. My experience is that this is not true. in the last 2 or 3 weeks I erased a bogus line from a Cambridge 20 file, and it was then accepted by the OLC with no red mark. Last year I did the same thing 2 or 3 times with no red mark, but maybe the security test was different then. You're not allowed to edit your flight logs. Thats the whole point of the security check. The recorded position fix was "bad", but it was part of the secure flight log in your *.cai file. Your only option is to appeal to whoever is evaluating the log, the OLC in this case, to ignore the obviously bad fix in the log. -Dave ZL |
#9
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![]() charlie foxtrot wrote: Hi All, Yep, one of the b-records in my flight was corrupt, look at the log time, shown with first 6 digits behind the B in line 1 time is 21:12:32 in line 2 time is 22:36:00 in line 3 time is 21:12:40, look at the excerpt of Your IGC file below! B2112323234199N10530479WA0334303580000022015000 B2236003402499N10530538WV0336003583000022015208 B2112403234260N10530608WA0338003602000020015000 The OLC did an administrative validation of my flight - THANK YOU OLC! I received an e-mail suggesting to open the B-record in notepad, and deleting the bogus line. Has anybody else tried this? Chris 'CF' Interesting. I've had 2 club members run into the same problem with the OLC recently. Exact same scenario. Here are the relevant portions of the latest file. Again, it's just one record out of order and, interestingly enough, flagged as a "bad fix". B 170222 4059430N 07500769W A 715 679 B 172206 5904629N 07500719W V 708 681 B 170230 4059510N 07500708W A 700 672 Even more intriguing, in all three files I've looked at, the longitude and altitude portion of the fix suggests that the record is actually a good fix but that the recording is what's screwed up (if you look these values all fit "in sequence" just fine, but the time stamp and lattitude are courrupted). I'm not familiar with the low-level coding in this sort of firmware, but if I didn't know better I'd say there's a very subtle bug in the logging module rather than a receiver problem. BTW, I just import the file into Excel which provides a simple parser at file open. Then, I have some macros to add values such as time between fixes, instantaneous (fix to fix) rate of climb, and rolling average rate of climb (last 6 fixes). Most of the problem show up immediately with this approach. P3 |
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