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As to a GPS anchor watch I note these two incidents:
A couple of years ago my wife and I took a walk down an old power line that was over grown but had a trail. I took my pocket GPS with me and logged the track. The outgoing and return tracks were off by at least 150 yards in places. Not big jumps but just gradually wandering off. As I was walking a very narrow path through otherwise dense forest I know I was traveling the exact same path. A couple of days later I unintentionally left the GPS plugged into my car overnight with the track turned on. The next morning I had a "scatter plot" for my track covering a couple of hundred yards. The GPS (Magellan) has AIS and has been dead accurate in every other instance. I use it to find deer stands in the dark when hunting - going out in the morning before sunrise. The point is that GPS SYSTEM, though phenomenally accurate MOST of the time can fail SOME of the time. I have thought of this when using the anchor alarm. I might be dragging or the GPS SYSTEM might be brain farting. A final point, oft made by Nigel Calder, not all charts are normalized to the same datum. For example, through first hand experience, and as noted on the charts, the South coast of Newfoundland charts Lat/Lon can vary by as much as 1/2 mile from the GPS position. It is not a simple conversion factor, the CGS does not know what the origional datum was. It baffles me how the CGS allows this to continue but it does. If you are interested I took a picture of my plotter which I posted here. http://ph.groups.yahoo.com/group/sho...os/browse/bd9e Howard |
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