
I just think if I tried to keep up with someone who was a lot faster than me I might try toooo hard and end up going into a corner faster than my abilities allow.
Aw Ed, you know I was only joking. I've never even seen you drive.ed wrote:Personally, im flattered to be listed in the same sentence as tut. I certainly am no master and still have a shed load to learn. I sincerely doubt i will ever be good enough to be listed in that category but as long as i still enjoy it ill keep doing it! HTH cheers Ed
No, I was wrong.pete wrote:
Are you sure about the one second "fix" thing?
takes deep breathrobin wrote:
Accuracy is typically no worse than 15m. If you assume that the errors are constant, then some of the errors cancel when you measure deltas, so accuracy on deltas is better. However, not all the errors are going to cancel - some will be truly random (noise type error), some will actually be position/orientation dependent (aerials work better in the plane of transmission than perpendicular to it) and some will be numerical (like rounding errors - these don't repeat from fix to fix). Finally, if you're unlucky the GPS receiver might use a different set of satellites from the hairpin to Duffus than it does from the dip back to the hairpin.
If you are travelling at an average speed of 26m/s (=60 miles per hour) then you will travel 2.6m in every 10th of a second. If the GPS non-repeating errors are about 2m, then you won't get very sensible updates (indeed it could look like you went backwards!).
So while the satellites do transmit enough data to compute many fixes per second, it seems that even at just 10 fixes per second, you won't get accurate track day performance data (would be OK in a EuroFighter though).
The best solution, IMHO, is to use a GPS fix now and then (once a second is fine) with accelerometers providing an inertial navigation system between the fixes. INS's accumulate lots of error quickly, but for a second they are fine and you can run them at just about any resolution you want - 1KHz would be no problem at all. I am sure there are systems out there that do this.
Cheers,
Robin