Satellite information, What is waas/egnos, Satellite location – Garmin GPSMAP 3005C User Manual

Page 106: Satellite strength indicator bars, Date, time, and current location

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GPSMAP 3005C Owner’s Manual

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Satellite Information

Satellite Sky View

45°

90°

Outer ring -

the horizon

Inner ring- 45°

above the horizon

Center dot - 90°

above the horizon

Satellite Location

The location of each available satellite is shown over two location rings on

the Satellite Information Page. The outer ring represents the horizon, the

inner ring represents 45° above the horizon, and the center represents directly

overhead. When the unit is using a satellite for navigation, the satellite number

is highlighted on the location rings. The unit can display satellite location with

North or your current track at the top of the display.

Satellite Strength Indicator Bars

The Satellite Strength Indicator Bars show the strength of the signal being

received, and the status of the signal. The bars are either shaded or filled. A

hollow gray bar means the unit is in the process of storing orbital data it is

receiving from the satellite signal. When the bar turns solid green, the unit

is using the satellite signal for navigation. A “D” in or above the bar means

differential corrections (WAAS or DGPS) are being applied to that satellite.

Date, Time, and Current Location

The unit gets date and time information from the satellite’s on-board atomic

clock. When the unit has achieved a 2D or 3D GPS location, the current location

is shown in the location format you have selected.

What is WAAS/EGNOS?

The Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) is an FAA-funded service to

improve the overall integrity of the GPS signal for users in North America. In

Europe, WAAS is referred to as EGNOS.
The system is made up of satellites and approximately 25 ground reference

stations positioned across the United States that monitor GPS satellite data. Two

master stations, located on either coast, collect data from the reference stations

and create a GPS data correction message.
According to the FAA’s Web site, testing of WAAS in September 2002 confirmed

an accuracy performance of 1–2 meters horizontal and 2–3 meters vertical

throughout the majority of the continental United States and portions of Alaska.
WAAS is just one service provider that adheres to the Minimum Operational

Performance Standard (MOPS) for global Satellite Based Augmentation Systems

(SBAS). Eventually there will be several services of worldwide geostationary

communication satellites that broadcast integrity information and differential

correction data as transmitted by ground reference stations.
All SBAS systems use the same receiver frequency; therefore any operational

SBAS system should be capable of providing your GPS unit with increased

accuracy at any location in the world.
Currently, enabling WAAS on your GPSMAP 3005C in regions that are not

supported by ground stations might not improve accuracy, even when receiving

signals from an SBAS satellite. In fact, it can degrade the accuracy to less than

that provided by GPS satellites alone. For this reason, when you enable WAAS

on your Garmin GPS receiver, the receiver automatically uses the method that

achieves the best accuracy.
For more information, go to

http://gps.faa.gov

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