home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- MOBILE.txt 7.7c TIPS FOR MOBILE APRS USERS
-
-
- NEW!!! The APRS MIC-Encoder will revolutionize mobile radio! It plugs
- into the Mic jack of any radio and puts your APRS-GPS posit on the tail
- end of any VOICE transmission. See VOX-APRS.txt.
-
-
- OVERVIEW: Although APRS on boats and aircraft already equiped with GPS
- or LORAN is obvious, it is IMPORTANT TO NOTE THAT APRS IS STILL VERY
- USEFUL FOR VEHICLES WITHOUT GPS TOO! Actually, the only stations
- that need GPS are the ones that are lost! For this reason, the first
- section of this file will discuss the use of APRS in a vehicle without GPS.
-
- Note: Be sure to replay the DIGI-E, DIGI-W, or DIGI-SE.bk file before
- going on a trip so you can see where the digiepaters are...
-
- MANUAL POSITION UPDATING: If a station knows where he is, he just
- zooms into his APRS map and moves the cursor to his location. Then he hits
- the INPUT-MY-POS command and enters his new course and speed. His posit
- will not only appear on everyone's screen, but he will also be deadreckoned
- along his course. Depending on the speeds involved and the size of the net,
- updates are only required when there is a significant change to course and
- speed. One station moving cross country reporting via HF set his course to
- 270 degrees and set in an average speed of about 50 MPH. Although he only
- updated his exact position once every few hours, because of the automatic
- APRS dead reckoning, his van appeared to everyone to move west giving a
- good approximation of his progress.
-
- Although we used GPS equipped bicycles during the 1993 Severna Park
- marathon, we did not even bother in 1994. We simply monitored the voice
- nets, and occasionally whenever someone mentioned where the LEAD, TAIL or
- PACK runners were, the APRS operator simply updated the reported locations,
- and all APRS stations along the route could see visualy where these objects
- were, even without listening to the radio. Additionally, since the course
- is always known, and the speed of the runners in a marathon is very well
- known, the dead-reckoned movement of these symbols between updates was
- actually just as accurate as GPS! See MARATHON.txt. A special version
- of APRS can actually deadreckon objects along a given course making all
- the turns indicated on the map. See DR.txt.
-
- MOBILE OPERATIONS: APRS was designed to make mobile operations with one
- finger relatively easy. The following summarizes the commands that are
- frequently used in the Mobile environment:
-
- G - GOTO: On any screen other than the MAP, this command will redraw
- the map centered on your vehicle. If you are already on the map,
- then GOTO puts the cursor on your station so that a single press of
- the PgUP/DN keys will allow you to zoom or home the map in one step.
-
- T - TRACK: Select this on the P-list. As a tracked station
- approaches the edge of any map, APRS will automatically re-draw the
- map in that direction. If TRACK mode is on, then the GOTO command
- will go to the Tracked vehicle.
-
- A - ALARM: Also activated on the P-list, will trigger BEEPs and cause
- your screen to be centered on the station if it moves. I use this
- one in my shack to alert me when the wife is coming home and I
- need to go to the kitchen and look busy and domestic on her return.
-
- IMP - INPUT-MY-POS: Use to manually update your position, or change your
- symbol, course, speed or comments.
-
- Unless your exact location between point A and B is important, simply enter
- your estimated average speed, and the straight line course to B. This way,
- other stations will be able to see your dead-reckoned progress toward B and
- you will not have to make frequent updates. Since APRS also DR's your
- progress on your own screen, you will see the same thing that everyone else
- sees. You can tell whether you need to update your progress or not. You
- will notice, that on your own screen, each DR'ed position is posted at the
- same time that a position report is transmitted by your station. That is
- why the reports will be close together initially and be spaced further and
- further appart. In order for this DR to work on your own screen, you must
- not be in HSP or SPM modes. See the ALT-SETUP-GPS-OFFgps command below.
- If you want to see where your DR'ed position is at any time between transmis-
- sions, simply hit the space bar, and a fresh DR will be displayed.
-
-
- CHEAP AND PLENTIFUL 8086 LAPTOPS: I prefer my old 8086 laptop monochrome
- LCD since it works BEST in bright sun! It only has dual flopies, but
- a minimum APRS system PLUS DOS will fit on a single 720K floppy. TO give
- you some more maps, though, you might want to use the DOS APPEND command
- to tell DOS to use the B drive as an extension of your A drive. To do this
- put your maps into a MAPS directory on B and use these DOS commands:
-
- APPEND /e
- APPEND b:\maps /x:on
- to cancel this later use APPEND ;
-
-
- AUTOMATIC GPS/LORAN INTERFACES
-
- See the GPS.txt file for information on interfacing your PC to GPS
- or LORAN. There are several methods of interfacing depending on whether
- you have a dual or single port laptop, and whether your GPS/LORAN has a
- periodicity that is user programmable. Some useful commands are:
-
- Alt-SETUP-GPS-TIMEsync - Synchronizes your PC clock to the GPS time
- in the next GPS posit heard. This is important to avoid dead-
- reckoning errors on small area maps!
- NOTE that this command only synchronizes the minutes, so
- you at least have to be in the right hour....
-
- Alt-SETUP-POSrate - Sets both your own screen updates and the
- on-air transmission rates through the TNC.
-
- Alt-SETUP-GPS-OFFgps - Turns off the HSP/SPM modes without having to
- re-configure. This is useful if you are normally configured for
- HSP or SPM modes but are going to be doing manual updating. If
- the PC is left in HSP or SPM modes, then your local screen will
- NOT be updated on each DR. IF HSP and SPM are off, then each
- time your position is transmitted, a new DR plot is drawn.
-
-
- OPS-COMM-GPS - Permits you to either communicate with your GPS if it
- has a bi-directional port, or to monitor the TNC. This command
- also switches the APRS port-splitter circuit in HSP mode so that
- you could monitor the GPS.
-
- F6 This key is called the QRT function because it forces your speed
- to zero as you approach your destination so that your posits will
- not continue to dead reckon on everyone's screens after you
- turn your system off.
-
-