sgt_scarecrow Posted May 27, 2004 Share Posted May 27, 2004 I notice in the Garmin 60c in test mode, one of the items displayed is temperature, but in regular mode there is no (apparent) option to display temperature as a data field. Is this support somewhere else on the unit or am I missing something??? Quote Link to comment
+Phone guy Posted May 27, 2004 Share Posted May 27, 2004 I believe, like the 76s, the temp is for water temp if you have the unit connected to a fish locator on your boat that is equiped with the temp sensor. Thats what I understand. Quote Link to comment
+Tahoe Skier5000 Posted May 27, 2004 Share Posted May 27, 2004 (edited) I believe, like the 76s, the temp is for water temp if you have the unit connected to a fish locator on your boat that is equiped with the temp sensor.Thats what I understand. Uh no... The temperature sensor is for the unit calibration of the internal crystal oscillator. The crystal is used in conjunction with the antenna for receiving the satellite signals. However, different temperatures change the physical properties of the crystal and therefore lead to little to no signal reception. To counteract this effect, there is a temperature sensor inside the unit which senses the case temperature and via a table of preset values, calibrates the crystal automatically for this "XO drift". If you somehow lose the compensation value table, the unit can automatically render a new one on its own through trial and error. This however takes a long time to do, being that the unit has to set a value of drift compensation for every single temperature degree of change. Sounds complicated, but its really not. You'll note that the test screen also have a value of XO drift. This is the compensation value set by the GPS computer to counteract the crystal change. The older your GPS gets, the higher the number usually gets... to a certain point. To reset the table and start over (not recommended) you'd just do a master reset on the unit. Edited May 27, 2004 by vw_ev Quote Link to comment
+Phone guy Posted May 27, 2004 Share Posted May 27, 2004 huh? So are saying that I am not correct? Well I thought it also could have been a sensor for the belchnoiter but I believe the wigometer compensates for that varience. Quote Link to comment
+Tahoe Skier5000 Posted May 27, 2004 Share Posted May 27, 2004 huh? So are saying that I am not correct? Well I thought it also could have been a sensor for the belchnoiter but I believe the wigometer compensates for that varience. Yes, I am saying you are incorrect. Quote Link to comment
MIQ_WRX Posted May 27, 2004 Share Posted May 27, 2004 (edited) If there is a temp sensor in the unit why not make that info available for the user? It is true that to utilize the "temperature" display data box you need to have water temperature info fed to the unit. -MIQ Edited May 27, 2004 by MIQ_WRX Quote Link to comment
sgt_scarecrow Posted May 27, 2004 Author Share Posted May 27, 2004 If there is a temp sensor in the unit why not make that info available for the user? It is true that to utilize the "temperature" display data box you need to have water temperature info fed to the unit. -MIQ My point exactly. Quote Link to comment
+Rubberhead Posted May 27, 2004 Share Posted May 27, 2004 (edited) The Garmin temperature reading warms up as you hold it. Knowing this Garmin is worried some idiot is going to get frost bite and sue them because his Garmin unit was telling him it was really 41º not really 17º like the weather man was telling him. Edited May 27, 2004 by Rubberhead Quote Link to comment
sgt_scarecrow Posted May 27, 2004 Author Share Posted May 27, 2004 The Garmin temperature reading warms up as you hold it. Knowing this Garmin is worried some idiot is going to get frost bite and sue them because his Garmin unit was telling him it was really 41º not really 17º like the weather man was telling him. I'd be more worried about the idiot who is staring at his GPS and walks off the edge of a cliff... but yeah, I suppose. Quote Link to comment
Vlad Posted May 28, 2004 Share Posted May 28, 2004 you are both correct in one sense (at least in terms of a feature/function of the gps) - one of you is talking about the units internal temperature sensor, and the other about a datafield available called "water temp"... Quote Link to comment
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