TimfromMersea
Well-Known Member
Had a curious experience on Saturday. My Northstar 557 plotter wouldn’t find position. It was showing that it was ‘seeing’ 8 or more satellites, but that they were ‘not used in fix’. The AIS and all other functions of it were working fine.
I simply couldn’t get it to find position. I power cycled it seven or eight times, did two ‘factory resets’ from the setup menu, restarted the GPS twice, turned the EGNOS feature off and on again, and when we got back to the mooring, left it for an hour or more to see if it would work when static. Nothing at all.
Then on the boat again Sunday, turned it on - and within a minute, plotting position! And it worked all day. Yesterday, just the same - found itself within a minute and worked fine all day.
It actually did exactly the same thing on one day last year as well.
Can any of ‘my learned friends’ on here shed any light on what might have caused this?
I wondered if, as a relatively old GPS set, it’s more vulnerable to interference than newer ones? There were lots of loud bangs from the Foulness ranges, which are really close to Mersea waters. Perhaps ‘they’ were experimenting with jamming GPS signals?? They’d never admit to it, would they..........
I’d be very grateful if anyone could shed any light on this, or has even perhaps experienced the same sort of issue.
Thanks in advance.
I simply couldn’t get it to find position. I power cycled it seven or eight times, did two ‘factory resets’ from the setup menu, restarted the GPS twice, turned the EGNOS feature off and on again, and when we got back to the mooring, left it for an hour or more to see if it would work when static. Nothing at all.
Then on the boat again Sunday, turned it on - and within a minute, plotting position! And it worked all day. Yesterday, just the same - found itself within a minute and worked fine all day.
It actually did exactly the same thing on one day last year as well.
Can any of ‘my learned friends’ on here shed any light on what might have caused this?
I wondered if, as a relatively old GPS set, it’s more vulnerable to interference than newer ones? There were lots of loud bangs from the Foulness ranges, which are really close to Mersea waters. Perhaps ‘they’ were experimenting with jamming GPS signals?? They’d never admit to it, would they..........
I’d be very grateful if anyone could shed any light on this, or has even perhaps experienced the same sort of issue.
Thanks in advance.