I wouldn’t expect your smart phone compass to be more accurate than +/- 5 degs
around the circle - at best.
On most quality, (read military) electronic compasses used for situational
awareness, there is an option to input the declination offset. Or if it has
GPS, then it can automatically look up the declination. In my experience this
is rare and it changes over time.
Here’s a map of the world for declination values. Some are very dramatic.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/28/Mv-world.jpg
Jim – KR9U
From: Larry Loen [mailto:lwloen@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, December 24, 2014 1:33 PM
To: jbwolf@comcast.net
Cc: TowerTalk
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Smart Phone Compass
FWIW, I've worked some with a compass function on my Android phones (two
different ones).
I am not all that impressed with the accuracy. Its OK for getting things
roughly right, like within 5 or 10 degrees, but I'd want something better for,
say, calibrating a rotor.
The problem is, the phones are just too small. It is too easy to make a
"parallax" mistake.
At the least, I'd want to use a larger tablet when trying to use it for
something this important.
Also, on Android, I've tried a couple of compass programs. One appears to use
GPS, the other just the magnetometer. The GPS one appears to me to be much
more accurate. I don't know how any magnetic based phone compass knows what
the current offset from true north is. Recall that in a lot of places, the
magnetic pole lines vary -- sometimes pretty substantially -- from north. If
one such is at your tower site, well, you're stuck unless your compass software
uses a GPS.
WO7R
On Wed, Dec 24, 2014 at 10:44 AM, James Wolf <jbwolf@comcast.net> wrote:
I can't speak for all smartphones, but those that use real magnetic
information for direction use a magnometer. Some use a 2 axis and some a 3
axis.
With the latest chips, there is some compensation for any close magnetic
material during calibration, but it can't do it all. The closer you are to
other magnetic objects the more error will be introduced. Calibration done
correctly is also somewhat critical.
The use of a demagnetizer on the phone is sometimes needed to remove
residual magnetism to get accurate results. The wildcard is this: How
much magnetic material is in the phone and how accurate do you need to be.
The chips are usually accurate to about 1 degree, but that is usually
optimistic when installed in the final device.
Jim - KR9U
------- Original message -------
> From: Wayne Kline <w3ea@hotmail.com>
> To: towertalk@contesting.com
> Sent: 23.12.'14, 21:37
>
> OK I do not want this to morph into the many proven ways to find
> TRUE north.
>
> The compass extra on a I phone..... True north .... I assume it is via
> GPS tribulation ??/
>
>
> Wayne W3EA
>
> PS Merry Xmas and Hpy Holidays to ALL TT'ers
>
>
> _______________________________________________
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> TowerTalk mailing list
> TowerTalk@contesting.com
> http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/towertalk
************************
_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________
TowerTalk mailing list
TowerTalk@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/towertalk
_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________
TowerTalk mailing list
TowerTalk@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/towertalk
|