+VentureForth Posted February 3, 2003 Posted February 3, 2003 One thing I noticed on TV watching some of the recovery efforts of the Columbia debris was that there were several people utilizing full-harness GPS receivers. I can believe that these GPSr's are well into the $10,000 range, but is their accuracy that much better than the handhelds, especially those with WAAS? On another note, are there any cachers volunteering in the mapping of debris? VF --------------- Go! And don't be afraid to get a little wet! Quote
+Hiemdahl Posted February 3, 2003 Posted February 3, 2003 I have not been able to find any of the authorities that are interested in volunteer searchers. Even if they have a GPSr, maps and search experience. My best guess is they are overcome with the immediate workload and are too busy to think about it. Hiemdahl Quote
jfitzpat Posted February 3, 2003 Posted February 3, 2003 Yes, some industrial and military receivers are considerably more accurate than consumer handhelds. The FAA, who has a big interest in WAAS, has some links on the subject. -jjf Quote
dsandbro Posted February 3, 2003 Posted February 3, 2003 The ones I saw on TV were Trimble Pro-XRS models. Yes, they are more accurate. They can real time differentially correct and WAAS is not usable in all parts of the country, particularly in mountainous or heavily forested terrain (I would think SE TX has good WAAS signals, but I could be mistaken). The size of the unit is also additional memory (store thousands of points, tracks, and features, not just a few hundred), store and display aerial photos and imagery, and a larger battery with a backup. The mushroom antennae is superior to the little built-in antennaes in the handheld units. The software has more features. You can configure the receiver to ignore a single satellite signal that drops below thresholds you set while processing the remaining signals (i.e. receiving six satellites but two are marginal. It will use only the best four or five). ======================================== Friends don't let Friends geocache drunk. Quote
boydg Posted February 3, 2003 Posted February 3, 2003 quote:Originally posted by Dave54:The software has more features. You can configure the receiver to ignore a single satellite signal that drops below thresholds you set while processing the remaining signals (i.e. receiving six satellites but two are marginal. It will use only the best four or five). At the risk of digressing, my understanding was that consumer-grade GPSr's automatically used the four best signals. Is this not true? ~ Boyd Quote
Kerry. Posted February 3, 2003 Posted February 3, 2003 quote:Originally posted by El Oso:At the risk of digressing, my understanding was that consumer-grade GPSr's automatically used the four best signals. Is this not true? No, not neccesarily as there's a few other variables to consider. To the original question, with respect the accuracy, generally the more $$'s the more "accuracy" capable (with integrity) the "user system" (several user system options) might be. Cheers, Kerry. I never get lost everybody keeps telling me where to go Quote
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