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We try to measure buildings more properly as the Yahoo images available for Ethiopia are low accurate (edit Apr 2015: the Bing images seem to be more accurate), old and mostly non existent (only for Addis Ababa to Street Level!)

Would it make sense to purchase a DGPS system?

How does that work? What would it cost? How to import data to JOSM?

asked 06 Aug '10, 12:13

Alex_AddisMap's gravatar image

Alex_AddisMap
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edited 07 Apr '15, 10:19


Would it make sense to purchase a DGPS system?

It helps to reduce the inaccuracy that is caused by the "weather" in the ionosphere. It does not help at all to reduce the inaccuracy caused by high buildings nearby. I agree that a better antenna might help.

How does that work?

You find a good article about DGPS on wikipedia.

What would it cost?

DGPS devices are from 0 € (because included in mobile phone already) up to thousands of €. The price depends on the accuracy you want to reach and the system by which you want to receive the DGPS correction data for your area.

How to import data to JOSM?

Just the same like without DGPS.

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answered 09 Feb '11, 12:22

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Kartograefin
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edited 18 Nov '13, 13:07

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aseerel4c26 ♦
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If a building as good straight sides you could produce some points well in the open but on the same sight line do this for all sides and you could draw the box. cheap but time consuming.

If these points are averaged (garmin vistas can take a number of readings and average a mark/waypoint) this would improve accuracy a bit more. If you don't have this facility on your GPS you could walk towards the building while staying on this sight line. Then if you draw a way through the average of the trace to and past the building this way can be edited two form the wall of the building. hope you get the idea

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answered 29 Jan '11, 13:56

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andy mackey
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edited 18 Nov '13, 13:09

aseerel4c26's gravatar image

aseerel4c26 ♦
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DGPS works by taking a reference station of known position that constantly recieves data from satalites, and uses it to work out the details of any erros over a wide area, these erros are usually caused by slight mis positioning of a satalite, or slight mis timings in it signals. This data is then sent to your GPS set so it can compensate.

I have found from personal experiance that GPS can be quite inacurate when next to large metal structures, this seems to be due to signals reflecting off them, and them blocking parts of the signal. DGPS is unlikelly to do very much for this as it's a local problem not a wide area problem.

It's possible that a better GPS set with a better antenna could help as lower signal intensities would be picked up better (from shielding) and dirty signals would be sorted out better (from reflections). I have however only played with 2 GPS sets, and I can say that a SIRF3 powered BGT31 is reasonably resiliant, but still has issues at times. I've never really tried it around proper highrise jungles though.

The only other thought that I have is that giving the set a few minutes to get it's bearings could help, it's hardly practical in many instances but it could improve things in some situations.

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answered 11 Aug '10, 23:57

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Thingomy
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1

+1 for pointing out that DGPS is unlikely to help with problems caused by large buildings

(11 Aug '11, 20:45) sleske

DGPS was developed when the GPS network had Selective availability witch made the accuracy less then 100m. DGPS could reduce this to 10-5m by using gps observatories to correct the error in the signal. After 2000 SA is turned of which makes accuracy 20-10m without DGPS.

DGPS are quite cheap. You probably have DGPS in your standard GPS unit, but might not be included in cheap chips often found in cell phones.

But you will probably not be able to use DGPS much in Ethiopia because DGPS depends on ground stations transmitting the GPS errors. Most of the transmitters are placed at the shores as DGPS was most used by ships that needed better accuracy then GPS with SA to safely navigate.

You could try to make your own GPS with DGPS with sources from the internet or a control GPS at a stationary position, but the gain would probably not be worth it.

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answered 06 Aug '10, 21:30

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edited 11 Aug '10, 09:43

TomH's gravatar image

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But what about setting up an own ground station? Especially around buildings, normal GPS is very inaccurate. Would that help there?

(08 Aug '10, 12:00) Alex_AddisMap

As I said this could help a bit, but it would be expensive and not worth it. To improve the data you should do more readings at different times and averaging those. You could also try measuring the distance between objects manually so that you at least get the relative position correct. Do not struggle to much with the finer detail when there is a world to map.

(08 Aug '10, 15:25) Gnonthgol ♦

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question asked: 06 Aug '10, 12:13

question was seen: 18,127 times

last updated: 07 Apr '15, 10:19

NOTICE: help.openstreetmap.org is no longer in use from 1st March 2024. Please use the OpenStreetMap Community Forum