How is it "cheaper" than GPS when no one in Europe pays for GPS? The fact that GPS is two orders of magnitude more accurate might be a selling point too...
Plus the Ruskis have their own GPS clone, and soon Europe will too.
GPS not immune to failure? Oh. OK. So 30 odd stations are less immure to failure than two/three? I miss the logic there.
Better dig out the backstaff and water clock. All this technology's rubbish apparently.
d'uh Oh!
Early last July, in Lyme Bay, we lost GPS for the day. As we were on our way from Torbay to the Exe on a fine day it didn't matter. Had we been elsewhere it could have been important. I don't know why we lost it, but I don't suppose it was because 30 satellites failed. GPS can be jammed, deliberately or by solar activity. Having a fall-back system for shipping seems sensible. That it is not as accurate as GPS can be is beside the point. An accuracy of about 100 metres is fine for normal navigation.How is it "cheaper" than GPS when no one in Europe pays for GPS? The fact that GPS is two orders of magnitude more accurate might be a selling point too...
Plus the Ruskis have their own GPS clone, and soon Europe will too.
GPS not immune to failure? Oh. OK. So 30 odd stations are less immure to failure than two/three? I miss the logic there.
Better dig out the backstaff and water clock. All this technology's rubbish apparently.
d'uh Oh!
Early last July, in Lyme Bay, we lost GPS for the day. As we were on our way from Torbay to the Exe on a fine day it didn't matter. Had we been elsewhere it could have been important. I don't know why we lost it, but I don't suppose it was because 30 satellites failed. GPS can be jammed, deliberately or by solar activity. Having a fall-back system for shipping seems sensible. That it is not as accurate as GPS can be is beside the point. An accuracy of about 100 metres is fine for normal navigation.
Accuracy: 0.004 – 0.01 nautical mile (8 – 20 meters)
Early last July, in Lyme Bay, we lost GPS for the day. As we were on our way from Torbay to the Exe on a fine day it didn't matter. Had we been elsewhere it could have been important. I don't know why we lost it, but I don't suppose it was because 30 satellites failed. GPS can be jammed, deliberately or by solar activity. Having a fall-back system for shipping seems sensible. That it is not as accurate as GPS can be is beside the point. An accuracy of about 100 metres is fine for normal navigation.
From http://elorantechnologies.com/eloran-technologies/
The plans are for it to be accurate enough to navigate a ship to dock in a port with no other inputs.
Early last July, in Lyme Bay, we lost GPS for the day. As we were on our way from Torbay to the Exe on a fine day it didn't matter. Had we been elsewhere it could have been important. I don't know why we lost it, but I don't suppose it was because 30 satellites failed. GPS can be jammed, deliberately or by solar activity. Having a fall-back system for shipping seems sensible. That it is not as accurate as GPS can be is beside the point. An accuracy of about 100 metres is fine for normal navigation.
Which planet are you on? Most air and marine navigation is by GPS. Compass, log and clock are the backup system. I'm perfectly capable of using traditional methods. The point of my post was that GPS can disappear when you least expect it, so upgrading Loran is a good idea for commercial shipping.But your compass would still work, GPS is for backup not navigation!
Had great difficulty using the compass on my charter holiday this summer as I guess it hadn't been swung in a while and we were in charted areas of magnetic anomaly. Luckily we had differential GPS which remained accurate to less than the length of the boat for 7 days solid. Not surprising really but the nay sayers will never be convinced.
Why do you need GPS to be more accurate than to a couple of 100m or so?
Had great difficulty using the compass on my charter holiday this summer as I guess it hadn't been swung in a while and we were in charted areas of magnetic anomaly. Luckily we had differential GPS which remained accurate to less than the length of the boat for 7 days solid. Not surprising really but the nay sayers will never be convinced.
What does the warning say on your gps when you switch it on? if your compass is wrong that's your fault! Mine is accurate!
But your compass would still work, GPS is for backup not navigation!
Why do you need GPS to be more accurate than to a couple of 100m or so?