I have a Garmin unit and from the factory WAAS/EGNOS support was set to 'off'.
I turned it on recently. I see little 'D' symbols sometimes appear in
satellite status but I haven't seen the promised 1 metre precision so far.
--
Ed Avis e...@waniasset.com
Peter Childs wrote:
I'm sure EGNOS is something else other than the new Euro GPS system,
but I can't for the life of me remember what, something to do with
food and Christmas rings a bell but I can't think what.
Anyway so EGNOS is now available for use.
So what new things can we do
EGNOS is just another SBAS (Satellite Based Augmentation System), and
with EGNOS 100% active we now have tree such systems, including the
wider known north american WAAS. I hope more such systems can be
available soon, knowing that India and China also are developing
similar systems, and
brgds
Aun Johnsen
On 05/10/2009, at 11:30, Jon Stockill wrote:
Peter Childs wrote:
I'm sure EGNOS is something else other than the new Euro GPS system,
but I can't for the life of me remember what, something to do with
food and Christmas rings a bell but I can't think what.
Anyway
Hmm. I've been happily using it for the past couple of years, on my Garmin
Legend Cx. I can get about 2m stated accuracy when it's working.
Though you're right - it's just been officially announced Ready for Use.
And it's not the new Euro GPS system - that's Galileo.
It's an accuracy augmenter
You're thinking of eggnog - assuming you weren't joking.
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Barnett, Phillip wrote:
You can tell when it's working as some of the satellite reception bars will
have a capital D above them.
Is that correct?
I sometimes get the D's displaying even if I have no reception (no bar
showing).
I've got a Garmin GPSmap 60C. Any body else get that quirk?
: Re: [OSM-talk] EGNOS
Barnett, Phillip wrote:
You can tell when it's working as some of the satellite reception bars will
have a capital D above them.
Is that correct?
I sometimes get the D's displaying even if I have no reception (no bar
showing).
I've got a Garmin GPSmap 60C. Any body else get
2009/10/5 Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com:
Barnett, Phillip wrote:
You can tell when it's working as some of the satellite reception bars will
have a capital D above them.
Is that correct?
I sometimes get the D's displaying even if I have no reception (no bar
showing).
I've got a Garmin
Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
2009/10/5 Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com:
Barnett, Phillip wrote:
You can tell when it's working as some of the satellite reception bars will
have a capital D above them.
Is that correct?
I sometimes get the D's displaying even if I have no
2009/10/5 Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com:
Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
2009/10/5 Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com:
Barnett, Phillip wrote:
You can tell when it's working as some of the satellite reception bars
will have a capital D above them.
Is that correct?
I sometimes get the D's
-boun...@openstreetmap.org] On
Behalf Of Martin Koppenhoefer
Sent: 05 October 2009 17:32
To: Dave F.
Cc: OSM Talk
Subject: Re: [OSM-talk] EGNOS
2009/10/5 Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com:
Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
2009/10/5 Dave F. dave...@madasafish.com:
Barnett, Phillip wrote:
You can tell
Hi
EGNOS delivers a correction Signal.
It's possible to receive it in realtime from a satellite or download
using FTP.
(I think it's here: http://www.egnos-pro.esa.int/ems/index.html)
If the gpx file has an information whether the coordinates are already
corrected, the EGNOS error correction
Hi,
bernhard wrote:
EGNOS delivers a correction Signal.
It's possible to receive it in realtime from a satellite or download
using FTP.
True, but I don't think the correction signal is something like add
.0182 to longitude and subtract .0012 from latitude. It is
rather correct
El Lunes, 5 de Octubre de 2009, Frederik Ramm escribió:
but unless someone more knowledgeable than myself says otherwise, I'll
assume that in GPS receiver terms, post processing still means
pre-lat-lon-output.
You're correct. I had been working with sub-metric GPS receivers, and what
they
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