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"Larry W4CSC" wrote in message
... On Tue, 27 Jan 2004 12:34:35 +0100, "Meindert Sprang" wrote: I have heard otherwise: A GPS derives it's speed from the doppler shift on the received carriers. A very slow averaging filter smoothes the output, which causes the delay in indicated speed. The filter is there to prevent erroneous speed indication due to atmospheric disurbances and multi-path signals. Meindert This might be true on some $70K sophisticated survey instrument or other, but, here at least, our discussion is about GPS operation on a cheaply-made piece of crap sold to the boating consumer at amazing markups, not sophisticated electronics. What you're talking about costs serious money. You won't find that at Waste Marine where price isn't related to quality.....(c; Well, the datasheet of my "cheaply-made piece of crap" GPS module, costing a whopping $70, clearly states the presence of doppler shift data in the raw datastream I can extract from that module. The used chipset is a very common one in low end GPS receivers. Do a google search on "gps speed doppler" and you'll find this info. Meindert |
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