Re: GPS speed while stopped?!
Its all in the filters.<br /><br />Ok, a quick primer. A GPS has no idea at all if you are moving or not. All a GPS knows is where it is at the moment. That said however, it is quite possible for a GPS to measure speed because the machine has memory. What the GPS does is remember where it is, and then about a second later it checks again to see where it is. If in the second reading it finds that it is not in the same spot that it was before it will calculate how fast it would have had to go to get where it is. That is how speed is determined by a GPS, by comparing where it was to where it is.<br /><br />Now, there is inherent position inaccuracy in every position location that any GPS gives. So although you haven't moved an inch your GPS may show you wondering around a bit just because your exact location at a specific moment in time is somewhat inaccurate. So if its reading from one location to another to determine speed and if the locations themselves vary because of inaccuracy then the GPS will come up with a calculation which shows it has moved, because it believes it has moved when in fact it really hasn't.<br /><br />Back in the days before President Clinton signed an executive order to make the Department of Defense stop degrading the GPS signals (the old Selective Availability) it wasn't uncommon to see a stationary GPS read that it was moving up to abuot 4 mph. That is because there was purposful inaccuracy of up to 100 meters tossed into the location. Back then you could erase your track plot and then just lay the GPS down and let it run for a couple of hours. When you came back you'd find a big black spot right in the middle of the screen that was the track of inaccurate locations. What you are seeing now is really the same thing, but on a much smaller scale. Most GPS units will filter that out for you so I'm suprised that you are still seeing it. My GPSMap-76 and GPSMap2006 will both read zero when we are standing still, but every now and then they will pop up and show us moving just for a moment.<br /><br />Thom