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GPS·C

  • ️Mon Nov 27 2006

GPS·C, short for GPS Correction, is a Differential GPS data source for most of Canada maintained by the Canadian Active Control System, part of Natural Resources Canada. When used with an appropriate receiver, GPS·C improves real-time accuracy to about 1-2 meters, from a nominal 15 m accuracy.

Real-time data is collected at fourteen permanent ground stations spread across Canada, and forwarded to the central station, "NRC1", in Ottawa for processing.

Visiting the external webpage for this service on 20111104, there is only a note saying that the service had been discontinued on 20110401. There is a PDF link on that page to possible alternatives.

CDGPS

GPS·C information is currently broadcast Canada-wide on MSAT by the CDGPS, short for Canada-Wide DGPS Correction Service. CDGPS requires a separate MSAT receiver, which outputs correction information in the RTCM format for input into any suitably equipped GPS receiver. The need for a separate receiver makes it less cost-effective than solutions like WAAS or StarFire, which receive their correction information using the same antenna and receiver.

CDGPS Reference Stations[1]
Station name Location Operational Date Coordinates
ALBH Canadian Forces Base, Esquimalt, British Columbia (near Victoria, British Columbia) May 1992 48°23′23.2″N 123°29′14.8″W / 48.389778°N 123.487444°W
ALGO Algonquin Space Complex, Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario January 1991 45°57′20.8″N 78°4′16.9″W / 45.955778°N 78.071361°W
CHUR Geological Survey of Canada regional seismic station, Churchill, Manitoba April 1993 58°45′32.6″N 94°5′19.4″W / 58.759056°N 94.088722°W
DRAO Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory, Penticton, British Columbia February 1991 49°19′21.4″N 119°37′27.9″W / 49.322611°N 119.624417°W
EUR2 New Environment Canada Weather Station building, Eureka, Nunavut October 9, 2005 79°59′20.2″N 85°56′15.2″W / 79.988944°N 85.937556°W
FRDN Hugh John Fleming Forestry Complex, near the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton, New Brunswick February 2003 45°56′0.6″N 66°39′35.6″W / 45.9335°N 66.659889°W
HLFX Bedford Institute of Oceanography, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia December 19, 2001 44°41′0.7″N 63°36′40.6″W / 44.683528°N 63.611278°W
NRC1 Institute for National Measurement Standards, National Research Centre, Ottawa, Ontario April 1995 45°27′15.0″N 75°37′25.8″W / 45.45417°N 75.623833°W
PRDS Dominion Observatory in Priddis, Alberta (near Calgary, Alberta) January 7, 1997 50°52′16.8″N 114°17′36.5″W / 50.871333°N 114.293472°W
SCH2 Transport Canada radio telecommunication facility, Schefferville, Quebec June 29, 1997 54°49′55.5″N 66°49′57.4″W / 54.832083°N 66.832611°W
STJO Geological Survey of Canada (NRCan) geomagnetic observing station, St. John's, Newfoundland May 1992 47°35′42.8″N 52°40′39.9″W / 47.595222°N 52.67775°W
WHIT Whitehorse, Yukon June 1996 60°45′01.8″N 135°13′19.5″W / 60.7505°N 135.222083°W
WINN NavCanada Winnipeg Area Control Centre building, Winnipeg, Manitoba January 9, 1997 49°54′02.1″N 97°15′34.1″W / 49.900583°N 97.259472°W
YELL Yellowknife, Northwest Territories January 1991 62°28′51.2″N 114°28′50.4″W / 62.480889°N 114.480667°W

External links

Map of all coordinates from Google

Map of first 200 coordinates from Bing

Export all coordinates as KML
Export all coordinates as GeoRSS
Map of all microformatted coordinates
Place data as RDF

See also

Historical

Transit (USA) · Timation (USA)  · Cyclone (USSR)

Operational

Beidou (China) · DORIS (France) · GLONASS (USSR/Russia) · GPS (USA)

In development

Compass (China) · Galileo (Europe) · IRNSS (India) · QZSS (Japan)

GNSS augmentation

EGNOS · GAGAN · GPS·C · JPALS · LAAS · MSAS · WAAS · StarFire

Related topics

References

  1. ^ "Active Control Point Stations". http://www.geod.nrcan.gc.ca/network_a/index_e.php. Retrieved 2006-11-27.[dead link]

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