GPS error

Author
Discussion

ianrb

Original Poster:

1,532 posts

140 months

Saturday 8th February 2014
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Well maybe not an error, just that GPS based sat navs appears to have decided my house has moved.

Over the years several cars with their various sat navs have allowed me to define where my home is and then have been able to navigate to within a couple of metres of my drive. I should point out I can find my own house, but the sat nav is useful in allowing me to know my ETA.

Since the start of 2014 my sat nav thinks my home is about 150 metres from where I live. And it's not just me; delivery drivers, who previously would come straight to my front door, are getting misdirected too.

I understand the general way GPS works, but am surprised that such a large error has appeared; I thought the error for civilian systems was only as few metres. Or is there something afoot in the US department of defense?



anonymous-user

54 months

Saturday 8th February 2014
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Are you talking about a postcode mapping error, or an actual Lat/Long co-ordinate error??

(if you have an GPS device that spits out raw Lat/Long you can type those co-ordinates straight into google and it will show you where it thinks those co-ordinates are on the planet!)

Baron Greenback

6,982 posts

150 months

Saturday 8th February 2014
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What you maybe seeing is the accuracy of the location of the roads change overtime. I have both Sat nav and hand held GPS and noticed that the latitude and Longitude of the Sat Nav doesn't agree with the GPS when set on World Geodetic System 1984 (current GPS main datum) or Ordnance Survey 1936 datum (what all UK maps uses).

As long as the position of the Sat Nav agrees with the position with in the road network and where north is it doesn't matter.

With good access to the sky (not middle of tall bunch of buildings) most modern GPS should be accurate to 10-20m after 2mins of satellite data reading.

MartG

20,678 posts

204 months

Sunday 9th February 2014
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It may not be a GPS error, but an issue with the map software. I know one version of AutoRoute has my house on the next block rather than where it actually is.

T0nup

683 posts

200 months

Tuesday 16th December 2014
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Only just seen this, interesting.

Have had a cheepo RAC Satnav for a while, and from time to time it throws some real curve balls. The strangest place I've been, is doing 400 mph in the middle of the North Sea. I live in Somerset.

Simpo Two

85,422 posts

265 months

Tuesday 16th December 2014
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Maybe that's where the guy worked before he got contracts with Amazon and NATS...?

Brigand

2,544 posts

169 months

Thursday 18th December 2014
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Part of my job is using software that tracks people's phones via the GPS in the handset. (Its a business, duty of care thing rather than stalking stuff I hasten to add!)

It can be quite interesting to see how the GPS data is displayed on our system, as it uses both a GPS fix to display a handset to within a few metres, or if there's poor GPS reception it will triangulate the position via the phone network GPRS, which is very inaccurate but gives an 'area' the handset could be in.

There have been times when a handset is amazingly travelling at a few hundred miles an hour, or they are miles out to sea despite being tucked up in bed. There's also an error which can occur which shows the handset somewhere off the coast of Ghana, but I think this is related to a kind of default point, I think that area is the origin point of all the Lat/Longs perhaps as its on the equator.

Strong solar flares can provide dodgy readings as well.

Dr Jekyll

23,820 posts

261 months

Thursday 18th December 2014
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Slightly OT here. But can I assume the authorities have some kind of hand held gadget that helps them follow suspects via their mobile phone? Essentially using the phone as a homing beacon.

I've always assumed they do but never seen a reference to it.

perdu

4,884 posts

199 months

Thursday 18th December 2014
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Dr Jekyll said:
Slightly OT here. But can I assume the authorities have some kind of hand held gadget that helps them follow suspects via their mobile phone? Essentially using the phone as a homing beacon.

I've always assumed they do but never seen a reference to it.
Hmm. If they told you, they'd have to...

Silent1

19,761 posts

235 months

Friday 19th December 2014
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Dr Jekyll said:
Slightly OT here. But can I assume the authorities have some kind of hand held gadget that helps them follow suspects via their mobile phone? Essentially using the phone as a homing beacon.

I've always assumed they do but never seen a reference to it.
yes but it's usually intelligence types with access, typically the police use triangulation from networks for run of the mill stuff, they can also send a silent text to the phone which will reply with gps co-ordinates.

Twobad

69 posts

174 months

Monday 22nd December 2014
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Quite a few years ago I found it necessary to learn about GPS as part of my job as we were using it to measure fall-of-shot coordinates in some artillery rocket trials.

Depending on which coordinate mapping system you choose and the Geoid (mathematical model of the Earth's shape) the Eastings and Northings coordinates of a particular location can be 100s of metres different. The US GPS system uses the WGS84 (World Geographical Survey 1984) as its basis with its own Geoid and the UTM (Universal Transverse Mercator grid based system, not Lat/Long) based on it is zoned with the Prime Meridian (central line of longitude for local UTM maps) for the UK goes through 0° Longitude.

The UK's cartographical OSGB system uses a variant of the UTM system but with the Prime Meridian moved 2° West so that it lies down the centre of the country, which improves the overall accuracy of the maps as this degrades as you move away from the central meridian. OSGB also uses a subtly different Geoid (Airey IIRC). All this means you can sometimes see an error between a map and your GPS depending on how you have set it up or its defaults if you haven't.

Ordnance Survey have defined a GPS coordinate system for the UK though which is separate to the cartographic system and is congruent with WGS84 so provided this is being used by the digital map maker you shouldn't see any differences when using a GPS.

The upshot of all thus is that there are a number of reasons why you might see apparent errors in GPS vs map data which can be due to the vagaries of the various systems and models in use. However, for 99.9% of the time all this should be invisible to the user, so I have no idea why your house appears to have moved.

Tunku

7,703 posts

228 months

Friday 2nd January 2015
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It'll be continental drift.

Baron Greenback

6,982 posts

150 months

Friday 2nd January 2015
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Datum (which people are talking about) shift between data sets can be within UK about 130m when comparing OS data set and the World Geodetic System 1984 (GPS WGS84 system) but world wide data the shift can be 2km! My Sat Nav data isnt on any known datum that I could work out! Contential drift would be very small off the top of my head European Terrestial Reference Frame is about 3cm / year movement when compared to WGS84.