comprehensive and quite complete information. I hope you can add a route lateron. Would also be good if you could place one of the photographs in the ID position, livens up the page.
Hi, Curious about the GPS-I just got a fish finder for Christmas but I don't think it talks with satellites, though folks having larger fish finders with GPS use them to find fishing holes or where they are on a large lake or sea. Do these things need to be calibrated? i.e. stand at some place with known longitude and latitude and set your GPS readings to match.
I think your reading was in a quadragle called Stewart Peak not far from where you should have been. Sounds like a good thread topic for message boards. Moni may have said she has a GPS because she mentioned damp leaves in a forest of deciduous trees interfering wi†h reception from the GPS satellites. This is hardly the case on West Pintler. Contact the manufacturer make sure the batteries are up to par.
I looked at your GPS data and it appears that you are recording a hybrid format which is degree(d) stands for a digit in degrees m stands for a digit in minutes.
Your data looks like ddd mm.mmmm instead of
ddd mm ss, degrees minutes seconds.
Josh wants ddd.dddddddd pure base 10 without the base 60 degrees minutes and seconds.
So for the east end of ( I am guessing that you gave Oreamnos tarn here) your data saysN 45* 56.870'----- W 113* 31.555'.
which is degrees and minutes in decimals without seconds.
for ddd.dddddd just replace 56.870 with 56.870/60 so divide 56.870 by 60 and get .947833333 In short get the Josh latiitude of 45.97783333 degrees north. Check the mode on your GPS and change it to decimal degrees than calibrate it with a known locale. Perhaps you know a surveyor, developer, forester, trapper or rancher anyone who uses GPS on a day to day basis. Get together with such folks and reconcile your data with theirs for the same locale- that is called callibration.
Johan Heersink - Dec 30, 2004 4:46 am - Voted 10/10
Untitled Commentcomprehensive and quite complete information. I hope you can add a route lateron. Would also be good if you could place one of the photographs in the ID position, livens up the page.
mrh - Dec 30, 2004 12:32 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentGood page. But most of your photos seem to be crooked in the scanner.
Scott - Dec 30, 2004 7:36 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentJust needs a signature photo.
desainme - Dec 30, 2004 8:23 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentAppears to be at the intersection of Ravalli, Deerlodge
and Beaverhead Counties.
desainme - Dec 31, 2004 10:52 am - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentHi, Curious about the GPS-I just got a fish finder for Christmas but I don't think it talks with satellites, though folks having larger fish finders with GPS use them to find fishing holes or where they are on a large lake or sea. Do these things need to be calibrated? i.e. stand at some place with known longitude and latitude and set your GPS readings to match.
I think your reading was in a quadragle called Stewart Peak not far from where you should have been. Sounds like a good thread topic for message boards. Moni may have said she has a GPS because she mentioned damp leaves in a forest of deciduous trees interfering wi†h reception from the GPS satellites. This is hardly the case on West Pintler. Contact the manufacturer make sure the batteries are up to par.
desainme - Dec 31, 2004 11:51 am - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentI looked at your GPS data and it appears that you are recording a hybrid format which is degree(d) stands for a digit in degrees m stands for a digit in minutes.
Your data looks like ddd mm.mmmm instead of
ddd mm ss, degrees minutes seconds.
Josh wants ddd.dddddddd pure base 10 without the base 60 degrees minutes and seconds.
So for the east end of ( I am guessing that you gave Oreamnos tarn here) your data saysN 45* 56.870'----- W 113* 31.555'.
which is degrees and minutes in decimals without seconds.
for ddd.dddddd just replace 56.870 with 56.870/60 so divide 56.870 by 60 and get .947833333 In short get the Josh latiitude of 45.97783333 degrees north. Check the mode on your GPS and change it to decimal degrees than calibrate it with a known locale. Perhaps you know a surveyor, developer, forester, trapper or rancher anyone who uses GPS on a day to day basis. Get together with such folks and reconcile your data with theirs for the same locale- that is called callibration.
wildstar - Dec 30, 2004 10:21 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentGood page.
mtwashingtonmonroe - Dec 30, 2004 11:33 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentNice job on this page! Have a Happy New Years!
-Britt
Gangolf Haub - Dec 31, 2004 5:32 am - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentGood page with thorough getting there info!
Joseph Bullough - Dec 31, 2004 12:47 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentNice job. In the future you may want to crop your pictures slightly to take care of the 'crooked' problem.
Saintgrizzly - Jun 25, 2005 3:08 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentNice page, Cory!