+greengecko Posted December 10, 2003 Posted December 10, 2003 Have you ever noticed that coordinates always seem to be more accurate on days when the weather is a light drizzly rain? Quote
+nincehelser Posted December 10, 2003 Posted December 10, 2003 (edited) Have you ever noticed that coordinates always seem to be more accurate on days when the weather is a light drizzly rain? No. Some folks would claim just the opposite. Or that their GPS works better/worse when the wind is blowing. Some people claim when the tree leaves are wet, reception is worse. There may be some truth to that, but I haven't really noticed it, myself. Usually what it comes down to is how the sats happen to be positioned at any particular time. They're always moving around, and sometimes you get a better triangulation geometry, and sometimes worse. Weather is less of a factor. I think atmospheric ionization probably plays a bigger role than weather. George Edited December 10, 2003 by nincehelser Quote
+Team Og Rof A Klaw Posted December 10, 2003 Posted December 10, 2003 Rain, snow, clouds, and GPS reception Quote
Kerry. Posted December 10, 2003 Posted December 10, 2003 Big wet trees can cause issues with multipath but it takes some analysis to prove it and no handheld can really do that. Space weather is much more imposing and variable but the earth weather really isn't an issue. GPS is a very dynamic system and conditions change from day to day, moment to moment, location to location etc etc. Many of these things are taken into account with regards accuracy spec but many things are also beyond the control of the system custodians and must be managed by the user. Cheers, Kerry. Quote
+Navdog Posted December 10, 2003 Posted December 10, 2003 For me, I have noticed satellite geometry has more of an influence on gps accuracy. Below is a graph for a 24 hr. period that shows pdop values near my house. Obviously, if you were caching around 1:00 pm, you might have a more difficult time zeroing in on the cache location. Of course, placing a cache at that time may be the reason a few days later the first finder notes his coords were off from what you posted. Quote
+ironman114 Posted December 10, 2003 Posted December 10, 2003 this site has some good info on accuracy of gps and how it is corrected. If you take your readings between correction times you could get some readings that are off. Quote
+Navdog Posted December 11, 2003 Posted December 11, 2003 Here is a direct link to the Trimble planning software. It's a free download and although a little geeky, it works great and is kinda fun to play around with. Trimble Planning Software Quote
dsandbro Posted December 11, 2003 Posted December 11, 2003 In my experience it is always right on the spot when I fire it up at home. The signal turns to crap as soon as I start looking for a cache. Quote
+Patuxent Pirates Posted December 11, 2003 Posted December 11, 2003 I have not figured out at all yet why my accuracy jumps around so much, but alas... it is a game and it is about "the hunt"! Quote
+Jeep_Dog Posted November 4, 2005 Posted November 4, 2005 So, I go out today to verify all the stages of a newly placed (not approved yet) multi-cache, and my GPSr is doing this kabuki dance all over the freaking place. I knew I had issues when I got to the parking area, and the needle (while walking, not stationary) was pointing 180 degrees from the first stage at .13 away! As I walked toward the cache, the distance went up, then all of a sudden blew down to about right, but the needle was still bouncing all over the place (about 200 feet away). In fact, the crazy little Garmin did not settle down after an hour. Anyone else getting some freaking GPSr behavior today? Quote
+Wacka Posted November 4, 2005 Posted November 4, 2005 Wednesday, about 4:15 PST, My GPSr was acting strange. Upon turning it on, it thought it was 300 miles away. I haven't been more than 90 miles away in the past year. When it would get a sat lock, it would shut off. I tried changing the batteries. No difference. About an hour later, it worked fine. It cost me a FTF! Quote
+BlueDeuce Posted November 5, 2005 Posted November 5, 2005 Have you ever noticed that coordinates always seem to be more accurate on days when the weather is a light drizzly rain? Yes. Quote
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