webcraft
Well-Known Member
remember to switch off the phone part of your phone to avoid it draining your battery too quickly in the vain attempt to find the masts.
Didn't know you could actually do this. You can switch off mobile data, but surely it will still look for a network?
Re. Other comments - there will be two fixed GPS/plotter units on the boat, I'm not nuts enough to base my nav strategy on one fragile device, it's as a backup in the event of lightening or similar catastrophic leccy failure. In fact here will be at least two phones, plus the Bluetooth GPS unit for my iPad if I can find it. And two large battery banks for recharging. One phone will have Memory Map on it, but this will only be used as a backup inshore.
I am pretty certain mast triangulation is unnecessary for a GPS position with most phones. Waiting five minutes for a noon position would not be an issue - that's pretty rapid compared to working out a sextant sight.
- W