dredhead
Member
Registered: Nov 2000
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Posts: 85 |
Re: GPS accuracy
quote: Originally posted by dampeoples
Even the stand alone handheld units deliver accuracy worse or about the same as these, they do have a new system, called WAAS (Wide Area Augmentation System) that delivers better accuracy by means of using a land based station that has a fixed position to help eliminate many errors and I have seen accuracy as close to 6Ft with mine, too bad none of the Springboards I know of have this kind of accuracy...
WAAS is available with the Geode, if memory serves. However, even before they were having all their delivery problems I didn't consider the price - double that of the GPS Companion - to be worth the accuracy.
Think about it, guys. In practical application of your GPS, how important is it that you find your front steps? If you end up 15 feet away from your mailbox, do you think you can figure it out from there? When you're driving and you find the little X is closely paralleling, but not quite exactly on top of a street, can you make the logical leap to assume you may in fact be on the street and not actually driving through people's lawns?
I use my hopelessly inaccurate Magellan for business travel (coupled with Vindigo to find a place to shop or eat, or with MapCompanion to find my hotel) and for pleasure travel (find squiggly road on map, use mapsonus or mapblast to get the co-ordinates of where many squiggly roads meet, mark a waypoint, pack a bag and hop on the 'cycle) with great success.
No, there's nothing wrong with your Magellan. It's as precise as it can be with older technology. It's also as precise as it needs to be. If you're out hiking, and you marked your campsite as a waypoint, I'll betcha even 45 feet away is close enough to spot a tent.
I know that in the digital age we're all getting used to no fuzziness - on/off, yes/no, and black/white. Relax, be a little analog, and enjoy the grayscale.
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