Welll.....that's not strictly true. If you've got an environment free of multipath, you use differential or WAAS-enabled GPS receivers, you can get pretty good accuracy.
Please note that all of these things depend on many factors and can be considered nearly "heroic" measures when it comes to position accuracy, but the Navy has historically been pretty damn concerned about knowing where their assets are and is somewhat obsessive about error-factors where that's concerned.
Nrsolis|12 years ago
Source: http://www.oc.nps.edu/oc2902w/gps/gpsacc.html
Please note that all of these things depend on many factors and can be considered nearly "heroic" measures when it comes to position accuracy, but the Navy has historically been pretty damn concerned about knowing where their assets are and is somewhat obsessive about error-factors where that's concerned.
MrUnderhill|12 years ago
Nrsolis|12 years ago
stefantalpalaru|12 years ago
Nrsolis|12 years ago
This is from the datasheet of the Trimble R10 surveying receiver:
real time Kinematic surveying
Single Baseline <30 km
Horizontal ...................................... 8 mm + 1 ppm RMS
Vertical ....................................... 15 mm + 1 ppm RMS
Network RTK3
Horizontal ..................................... 8 mm + 0.5 ppm RMS
Vertical ...................................... 15 mm + 0.5 ppm RMS
RTK start-up time for specified precisions4 .....................2 to 8 seconds
Trimble CenterPoint RTX
Horizontal .................................................. 4 cm
Vertical .................................................... 9 cm
RTX convergence time for specified precisions12 ........... 30 minutes or less
RTX QuickStart convergence time for specified precisions12 .... 5 minutes or less Trimble xFill5
Horizontal ................................. RTK6 + 10 mm/minute RMS
Vertical ................................... RTK6 + 20 mm/minute RMS
chrissmithuk|12 years ago
It's fine for surveying but for dynamic applications which are far more common, it's a pain.