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Recently, Ben Jackson posted:
In article , Phil Verghese wrote: So it looks like the GPS is showing True Altitude (which makes a lot of sense). True altitude is the actual height above MSL, More precisely it's showing the height above the datum, which is the mathematical model of the earth ellipsoid the GPS uses to approximate the actual Earth. General question: is there are practical difference between the datum and MSL? Neither have any local relevance, AFAICT. Neil |
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Recently, Ben Jackson posted:
More precisely it's showing the height above the datum, which is the mathematical model of the earth ellipsoid the GPS uses to approximate the actual Earth. "Neil Gould" wrote in message k.net... General question: is there are practical difference between the datum and MSL? Neither have any local relevance, AFAICT. The geoid height is typically -100 ft over the US, meaning that the zero of the NAD 83 ellipsoid and mean sea level differ by about 100 ft. Julian Scarfe |
#3
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Recently, Ben Jackson posted:
In article , Phil Verghese wrote: So it looks like the GPS is showing True Altitude (which makes a lot of sense). True altitude is the actual height above MSL, More precisely it's showing the height above the datum, which is the mathematical model of the earth ellipsoid the GPS uses to approximate the actual Earth. The Garmin GPS receivers that I've used all report elevation above the geoid which models Mean Sea Level (MSL), not the ellipsoid. Internally they initially calculate elevation above the ellipsoid, but then they apply values from a lookup table that has corrections for the geoid - ellipsoid difference based on the geographic position. I believe Magellan units and some newer Lowrance units also correct for the geoid-ellipsoid difference so the reported elevations represent height above MSL rather than the ellipsoid. |
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