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much higher than that"In the range of a high end DC."
Okay, nothing new here. Can the startling title of this thread be changed to something less misleading? As the first however-many comments noted, there is no "underwater GPS."
The title is only misleading if you expect that Global Positioning System refers specifically to a receiver for picking up satellite signals from NAVSTAR, GLONASS, etc.
Certainly the title is meant to draw readers to the thread, but I'd say it's perfectly valid to use other technologies (dead reckoning, map+compass+clock+sextant, etc) in order to determine one's position on the globe.
Well you spent way more than two minutes complaining about the two minutes you wasted, but then again that's typical forum behavior, nothing new there.THE Global Positioning System is what it is. Yes, I would expect a reference to GPS to refer to GPS. "Other technologies," such as inertial navigation, are not the Global Positioning System.
I realize that the two minutes I feel I wasted reading after clicking on the thread title will not ruin my life, but for whatever it's worth, I would not have clicked on the link had I understood the thread to be about an inertial navigation system, which has been the subject of many prior discussions.
Well you spent way more than two minutes complaining about the two minutes you wasted, but then again that's typical forum behavior, nothing new there.![]()
That's one of the problems - in order to be accurate, you have to be very still when you start tracking - any drift will accumulate over time and the error will accumulate. For example, if you start drifting 20 feet per minute, you'll be off by 200 feet after 10 minutes, etc.. If you start still and accelerate to drifting 20 feet per minute then drift for 10 minutes, it should know you are 200 feet away from where you started.
You also need pretty good sensors, but the math isn't all that complex. That said, you have to track orientation of the device as well as movement of the device, and every measurement's inaccuracy accumulates over time with all the other errors. I wouldn't expect pinpoint accuracy out of a consumer product, but probably good enough for scuba diving.