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by oasisbob
902 days ago
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> The GPS measurements are 100% reliable. Think of it like getting GPS co-ordinates while on a boat - it's the boat that moves. I'm not sure this is a good metaphor. When doing high-accuracy GNSS (GPS) survey work, a static reference station is typically used to help correct errors from the GPS measurements themselves. If GPS was 100% consistent and reliable, differential correction wouldn't be a common and often-required technique: https://www.e-education.psu.edu/natureofgeoinfo/c5_p23.html |
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Ultimately GNSS is just measuring your position relative to some celestial objects using the time it takes for signals to propagate space (and some other info: their ephemerides, and a shared-ish clock). The fact that land exists, and where it exists, are not relevant
Your error corrections might be thrown off when the base station moves, but that’s not an issue of GNSS that’s an issue of RTK