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On Sat, 17 Jan 2004 19:35:20 -0800, "Chuck Tribolet"
wrote: Larry, this is one of the rare occasions when you are wrong. Different geostationary birds will have different elevations. The one straight south of you will have an elevation of about 90 minus latitude degrees and will be the highest. One 180 degrees around the world will have a negative elevation. -- Chuck Tribolet http://www.almaden.ibm.com/cs/people/triblet You are correctimundo, however as the GPS antenna is not pointable, the website will give them a fair idea, within a few degrees, of the elevation of any geostationary bird from their zip code. The further north you go the worse the problem. The website won't tell them EXACTLY how bad it is, but will give them a general idea..... Hmm.....we could take one of these gyro stabilized DirecTV dishes, replace the 10 Ghz feedhorn with a WAAS feed horn.....Nope, we're gonna need a bigger dish to make it have more gain.....(c; HEY, my neighbor has one of those REALLY BIG old satellite antennas that's scrambled now he's not using!........hee hee. On a more serious note, I don't believe the GPS has to have CONSTANT WAAS data to make it accurate. The drift you get corrected for is VERY slow moving, so if it had a lock on WAAS data every few minutes that should be good enough for good correction, shouldn't it? I'd think the manufacturers would tell the receiver to use the LAST available data until new data arrives. Larry W4CSC |