Difference between revisions of "2010-04-21 45 -122"

From Geohashing
imported>Michael5000
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imported>Michael5000
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== Expedition ==
 
== Expedition ==
<!-- how it all turned out. your narrative goes here. -->
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I drove out to Estacada in lieu of lunch, trying out my new GPS unit for the first time.  It was very satisfying to track my approach to the hashpoint.  I pulled off the highway near the site, found a trail into a little woods, and got within 90 feet, according to my new gadget, from the hashpoint before being blocked by a steep ditch.  The hashpoint didn't look like what I remembered from the aerial image, but in the spirit of testing out the GPS I hadn't brought a printout.
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Huh.  I went back to the truck and found a gravel road to approach the hash from another direction.  When I reached the quarry entrance, though, the GPS was pointing decidedly BEHIND me.  This seemed weird, but I looped around, determined that the hashpoint was very much in someone's fenced yard, and headed back to town.
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Back at a computer, looking at the aerial image again, I could see that it's version of the hashpoint was definitely not my GPS's version of the hashpoint.  I carefully compared numbers, thinking I had perhaps programmed the GPS improperly, but the numbers were all right.  There seemed that there might have been a hundredth of a second's discrepancy due to rounding, but I double-checked to determine that this would not be significant (it's about one foot).
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Perhaps a reader savvy in the ways of GPS has already figured out what went wrong, but it took me a while to figure.  It turns out that my gadget didn't ship with either of the two logical ways of describing longitude and latitude -- either a straight decimal coordinate (eg. 45.500000° N) or coordinates with minutes and seconds (eg. 45° 30' 00.0" N), but rather a bastard child of coordinates with minutes only (eg. 45 30.000" N).  So when I had dutifully entered today's latitude, 45° 20' 25.7" N, I was actually telling my GPS to look for 45° 20.257' N.  If you've followed me this far, you can understand that this put me off by several hundred feet.
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Here's how far off I was: the purple line represents my trek through the woods trying to reach the wrong hashpoint (the red circle).
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[[File:2010-04-21 45 -122 map.JPG]]
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I'm allocating blame evenly for this failed expedition between my own mucking up of the technology and the GPS manufacturer using a silly default setting.  On the positive side, I learned more about my GPS and how to use it. On the negative side, the error kept me from being able to wander around in an old quarry site littered with abandoned equipment and faded old "No Tresspassing" signs.  What could have gone wrong?
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{{Blinded by Science
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| latitude = 45
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| longitude = -122
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| date = 2010-04-21
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| reason = because of troubles with the coordinate format on a GPS unit.  
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| name = Michael5000
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| image = 2010-04-21 45 -122 map.JPG
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}}
  
 
== Tracklog ==
 
== Tracklog ==

Revision as of 21:41, 21 April 2010

Wed 21 Apr 2010 in 45,-122:
45.3404859, -122.3514034
geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox


Location

At the edge of a quarry site north of Estacada.

Participants

Plans

Expedition

I drove out to Estacada in lieu of lunch, trying out my new GPS unit for the first time. It was very satisfying to track my approach to the hashpoint. I pulled off the highway near the site, found a trail into a little woods, and got within 90 feet, according to my new gadget, from the hashpoint before being blocked by a steep ditch. The hashpoint didn't look like what I remembered from the aerial image, but in the spirit of testing out the GPS I hadn't brought a printout.

Huh. I went back to the truck and found a gravel road to approach the hash from another direction. When I reached the quarry entrance, though, the GPS was pointing decidedly BEHIND me. This seemed weird, but I looped around, determined that the hashpoint was very much in someone's fenced yard, and headed back to town.

Back at a computer, looking at the aerial image again, I could see that it's version of the hashpoint was definitely not my GPS's version of the hashpoint. I carefully compared numbers, thinking I had perhaps programmed the GPS improperly, but the numbers were all right. There seemed that there might have been a hundredth of a second's discrepancy due to rounding, but I double-checked to determine that this would not be significant (it's about one foot).

Perhaps a reader savvy in the ways of GPS has already figured out what went wrong, but it took me a while to figure. It turns out that my gadget didn't ship with either of the two logical ways of describing longitude and latitude -- either a straight decimal coordinate (eg. 45.500000° N) or coordinates with minutes and seconds (eg. 45° 30' 00.0" N), but rather a bastard child of coordinates with minutes only (eg. 45 30.000" N). So when I had dutifully entered today's latitude, 45° 20' 25.7" N, I was actually telling my GPS to look for 45° 20.257' N. If you've followed me this far, you can understand that this put me off by several hundred feet.

Here's how far off I was: the purple line represents my trek through the woods trying to reach the wrong hashpoint (the red circle).

2010-04-21 45 -122 map.JPG

I'm allocating blame evenly for this failed expedition between my own mucking up of the technology and the GPS manufacturer using a silly default setting. On the positive side, I learned more about my GPS and how to use it. On the negative side, the error kept me from being able to wander around in an old quarry site littered with abandoned equipment and faded old "No Tresspassing" signs. What could have gone wrong?

Science.PNG
Michael5000 earned the Blinded by Science Consolation Prize
by failing to reach the (45, -122) geohash on 2010-04-21 because of troubles with the coordinate format on a GPS unit..
2010-04-21 45 -122 map.JPG

Tracklog

Photos