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Larry W4CSC wrote:
GPS has no compass heading information, actually. This is why your GPS doesn't know which way to point the "heading up" display on the chart plotter when the boat is stopped, unless you have a compass sensor input. The heading information on a GPS-only system depends on measuring the change in the lat/long over several measuring periods before it displays heading information. If the boat merely rotates around its anchor, this information will not be available or will be totally inaccurate. GPS receivers only provide 3 pieces of information. Latitude, Longitude and Altitude....the 3 dimensions in space. All other information (speed, heading, COG, VMG, etc.) are all derived by the computer monitoring the changes in these 3 dimensions over time.....many seconds. That's why it takes so long for it to change heading or speed or VMG or other derived outputs when you make that turn or come about. You forgot time. And how long is the "so long" you refer to in indicating a change in heading or speed? It doesn't seem "so long" on my GPS instruments. Perhaps you wired them up wrong, eh? -- Email sent to is never read. |
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