Is it any wonder you were not invited to lecture on the subject, Saitch?![]()
Sun obs. and star obs. were still in use 30 odd years ago, in certain circumstances.
I remember booking for one of the surveying students I knew, at Bartleys Hill lookout, in Brissie, mid-winter. It was part of his uni course. The night was freezing, so a bottle of Bundy was packed with the gear. About 5 minutes before commencement time, cloud came in. While we waited for the cloud to dissipate, the Bundy was consumed.
Even though the cloud did clear, the night was abandoned, as the student wouldn't have focused the instrument too well!
I don't know how Spudfan would have got on with the cold and cloud in his environment? Timing would have been of the essence, I imagine.
'sit bonum tempora volvunt'
Is it any wonder you were not invited to lecture on the subject, Saitch?![]()
If you don't like trucks, stop buying stuff.
Unless the GPS system has changed significantly I don't believe that's feasible.
Selective Availability (which was the method whereby Civilian GPS had a broader definition of accuracy) was either on or off. It was switched off for the First Gulf war, then permanently in 2000. It hasn't been turned back on and as of 2007 any satellite deployed doesn't have the capability.
Because of the way the constellation works, there is no ability to alter timing characteristics being directed at certain locations, and having to try and coordinate 8 or more satellites to lie at the same time, but only while passing over a specific geographic region (even if technically possible) would cause timing disturbances that would be globally flagged immediately. Just like the temporary disabling of SA in the first Gulf War. News got around real quick when the boffins all noticed their fixes became more accurate.
You're pro'ly right and the outcomes I mentioned are more likely to be done by GPS jamming or spoofing.
GPS Jamming in Ukraine - Space News & Breaking Defense - RNTF (rntfnd.org)
Last edited by RANDLOVER; 8th May 2022 at 11:20 PM. Reason: Added Link
2005 D3 TDV6 Present
1999 D2 TD5 Gone
And the reason being.....
I dont know if mobile phone gps co ordinates are correct yet but they were wrong.
I found this out while working with a marine rescue service and co-ordinates sent to us by boaties needing assistance put us miles out when we responded and put the boaties in risk.
I forget what it is now but before we left base our radio operator usually applied a simple formula to check/correct co-ordinates given from the boaties mobile phone.
I think it was a digital>analogue conversion needed
I still never use one no matter where I go , prefer the Mk11 eyeball and dead reckoning.
Which is why these days there's a link to allow connecting the GPS to the back of the VHF. Push that emergency Chan 16 button and it'll transmit the current coords as part of the emergency call. Takes one of the weak links out of the comms chain ( an operator under duress).
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