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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
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    Frankfort
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    RE: OK, my ignorance.....

    I feel bad for happened to these people and for what their families are going though. But i don't understand why people are using thier GPS to blindly navigate.


    every GPS unit that i've ever used has a warning telling us not to do this.

    maybe that warning is on there for a reason?????????????

  2. #2
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    RE: OK, my ignorance.....

    [font size="1" color="#FF0000"]LAST EDITED ON Jun-28-06 AT 11:59AM (EST)[/font][p][font size="1" color="#FF0000"]LAST EDITED ON Jun-28-06 AT 11:58*AM (EST)[/font]

    Hey this sounds like another GOOD point for using head lights !! I bet they would have seen that wall before they hit it ??? Yea some argue that it blinds them. BUT that blindness (if it happens) is only temporary. DEATH is permanent

  3. #3
    Join Date
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    Benton, KY
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    RE: OK, my ignorance.....

    I agree SpotBoy!

  4. #4
    Join Date
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    RE: OK, my ignorance.....

    Danny,

    Here's a clip that I cut from an article on Satellites and GPS navigation that should answer your question:

    .....The last major issue was the altitude of the GPS satellite constellation. Satellites are generally either placed in low Earth orbit, a few hundred kilometers high, or in geostationary orbit over the equator, 36,000 kilometers high, where they take 24 hours to orbit the Earth and remain in a fixed position relative to the Earth as it turns under them.

    Putting the satellites into low Earth orbit would reduce the size and cost of the boosters required to launch them, and would also reduce the power required for the transmitters on the satellites. However, obtaining adequate coverage would demand a large number of satellites. Putting them into geosynchronous orbit would reduce the number of satellites, but it would require more powerful launchers and transmitters, and it would not provide good coverage of the polar regions.

    The altitude finally chosen was a compromise: a circular orbit with an altitude of 20,200 kilometers and a period of 12 hours. At that altitude, 17 satellites would be enough to make sure that four of them, the minimum number needed to establish a position, would always be visible from any location on the Earth's surface.

    The GPS constellation finally implemented actually has 24 satellites, consisting of 21 in active operation, plus three spares. The 24 satellites operate in six different orbital "planes" (an orbital path shared by multiple satellites), with four satellites in each plane. The planes are inclined 55 degrees with respect to the equator. The GPS satellites are also fitted with nuclear blast detectors as a secondary mission, replacing the early "Vela" nuclear blast surveillance satellites in this role.



  5. #5
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    Thanks Scott.... and....

    Hey Scott, that was some great reading. To prevent my searching, can I take a short cut and ask you the URL to that site? I'd love to read more.

    Thanks,

    Danny

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    Benton, KY
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    RE: Thanks Scott.... and....

    Ask and you shall receive!



    http://www.faqs.org/docs/air/ttgps.html

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    Sonora, KEntucky
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    RE: GPS

    A bridge would only cause a few seconds problem, a vertical wall could very easily be a major problem. You not only take 40%-50% of possible sky you also create a Multi-path problem. Multi- path thinks the unit is still locked in good position but in fact the fraction of a second delay in the signal can cause major position error. 50-100 feet easy. There is no way to know for sure. I just know that there are several possible problems and all but one is human created, solar flares can cause some major problems. The only time I had problems with weather conditions one time it was when I had about 4" of snow on my antenna. It is terrible about the accident, that is why IMO anyone would be extrememly foolish to navigate in our lakes around here using only GPS or relying soley on them, there are too many factors that can cause problems. The biggest factor being human involvement. How they work is an exact science how people use them is not.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
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    RE: GPS

    Well put MASBASS.

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