Magellan Explorist 200 Gps Receiver
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Magellan eXplorist 200 GPS For serious outdoor use, the eXplorist? series handheld GPS navigation systems are built to cover all requirements. With their tough, impact-resistant, water resistant exterior magellan explorist 200 gps receiver and their proven Magellan technology inside that packs powerful functionality into an easy-to-use operating system, your outdoor needs will be covered. Features include: Magellan TrueFix? technology that incorporates a superior 14-parellel?channel, WAAS/EGNOS?enabled GPS receiver to provide precise position fixes within three meters One button access quickly takes users directly to the functions that matter most: menu, navigation screens, personal points-of-interest storage, "go-to" routing magellan explorist 200 gps receiver and backlight 20 routes magellan explorist 200 gps receiver and 5 tracklog files with up to 2,000 Waypoints Built-in North American background map Background map offers convenient access to roads, parks, waterways, airports magellan explorist 200 gps receiver and more Overall size: 4.6" x 2.1" x 1.3" Display size: 2.3" diagonal, four level grayscale LCD display Zoom capability magellan explorist 200 gps receiver and amber backlighting Rubber-armored, impact resistant case Water resistant to IPX-7 standards
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Personal Lightweight GPS Receiver - The Personal Lightweight GPS Receiver, or PLGR, is the most widely used GPS receiver used in the United States military today. The PLGR is a self-contained, hand-held, five-channel, single frequency GPS receiver that provides accurate Position, Velocity and Timing (PVT) data to individual ...
Differential GPS - ... uses a network of fixed ground based reference stations to broadcast the difference between the positions indicated by the satellite systems and the known fixed positions. These stations broadcast the difference between the measured satellite pseudoranges and actual (internally computed) pseudoranges, and receiver stations may correct their pseudoranges by the same amount.
RAIM - RAIM is the abbreviation for Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring, a technology developed to assess the integrity of Global Positioning System (GPS) signals in a GPS receiver system. It is of special importance in safety-critical GPS applications, such as in aviation or marine navigation.
Time to first fix - Within GPS, time to first fix or TTFF is a property of a GPS receiver. It is the time from turning on the GPS receiver untill a position is calculated.
magellanexplorist200gpsreceiver