Seeing this over 1000m may be just a coincidence. I use OsmAnd
to log hikes ranging from 1500m (the lowest elevation you can find
near here) to over 3000m.
Is it possible that there's more thick tree cover when you're in the
mountains? I used to have an older (Garmin) GPS that had a very
difficult time getting a fix when in the forest (back when I lived
near sea level, so altitude wasn't a factor). I used to try to stop
in a clearing before turning on the GPS so it would get its fix; but
even then, it would often lose the fix several times during a forest
hike. With a Garmin, that was especially annoying because it ended
up adding wildly wrong points to the track, sometimes points that
were miles away from the correct location. OsmAnd seems much more
sensible about what it does when the GPS loses its fix (which with
my current phone usually only happens in deep canyons).
...Akkana
Manu EL writes:
> Thank you to all.
> I did not get better results by modifying battery settings.
> I know that 1000m is not high elevation. I was just pointing that my issue
> occurs when I am above 1000m. I have screenshots from "GPS Test" app but do
> not know how to post them.
> As I am in the mountains, I am still using my workaround. I will reset my
> phone when at home but won't be able to see immediately if this solves the
> issue because I live far from the mountains.
>
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