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Help create better charts
On 26 June, 14:29, IanM wrote:
alt.sailing.asa xpost dropped in the hope of having a reasoned technical discussion :-) John Navas wrote: On Fri, 25 Jun 2010 08:38:28 -0400, in s.com, "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote: "Tim Thornton" wrote in message .... TeamSurvis a project to help create better charts of coastal waters, by getting sailors to log GPS and depth data - seewww.teamsurv.eufor more information. For example, in Britain the UKHO states that only 50% of Britain's coastal waters are adequately surveyed, and they concentrate on areas used by commercial shipping. JoinTeamSurvand help update the charts and fill in the gaps. ... What an IGNORANT idea. What you're trying to do is make a Wikipedia Charts system. In other words, something any inept fool can contribute to and make the entire effort something that can't be relied upon. Bad idea - an example of stupid liberal thinking. Sailing by a committee of amateurs and wannabes! AMEN! Done well, this could be very good. *Done poorly, it would be no worse than the quality of 'local knowlage' to be gained in the bar from the club bore or wannabe. Lets assumeTeamSurvhave done their homework: 1. Prefer vessels based in locked marinas. * Reason: passing over the lock sill allows the data sequence to be checked for incorrect GPS datum and the depthsounder offset to be calibrated. 2. Discard sequences where the track/depth data cannot be reconciled with recently surveyed features. * Reason: Depth sounder calibration and anti-tamper precautions 3. Encrypt the data sequences and store ALL available NMEA data + logger local time. *Reason: Anti-tamper precaution - Anyone reasonably competent can fake a NMEA position sentence + bogus depth data, but to successfully tamper with the whole dataset for a voyage would be much harder. 4. Compare the data sets from multiple voyages and vessels to 'rate' each data set and even each vessel for accuracy. At the very least this could be used to highlight areas that urgently need re-surveying *and I can think of half a dozen shoals or bars that tend to move in winter storms in my *usual sailing area that I would be glad to have even one recent track with depths over. Its a high tech version of following the yacht in front of you, but at least you know its not a *Southerly with the keel cranked up! -- Ian Malcolm. * London, ENGLAND. *(NEWSGROUP REPLY PREFERRED) ianm[at]the[dash]malcolms[dot]freeserve[dot]co[dot]uk [at]=@, [dash]=- & [dot]=. *Warning* HTML & 32K emails -- NUL: Ian, We work along much of what you say. For point 1, we require each boat that joins to go through a calibration porocedure before we process their data We don't do 2 explicitly, but as part of the QA we compare results against bathymetric survey data where possible or, failing that, against chart data 3 - we do record all NMEA data, both for security and also it gives us better accuracy, e.g. temperature helps feed in to speed of sound corrections, and heading is better than COG to correct for the displacement between GPS antenna and depth transducer. 4 - we will do this as we get a high enough density of data in areas. Tim |
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