Zone-5 wrote:That last sat bar of yours Keith that indicates a '255'! Where the heck is that one from...
I'm not sure, but the 255 seems to pop up only on my eTrex 30, not on my other GPS devices. And not all the time. I've noticed it populates the bottom row only when the Glonass satellites haven't aren't taking up the whole row. With the bottom row populated by Glonass satellites, the 255 doesn't appear.
The original guidelines set by IS-GPS-200F had the PRN assigned satellite numbers 120-158 reserved for SBAS, 64-119 and 159-210 for other Global Navigation Satellite systems. They've added the 200-235 range for Beidou satellites now I believe.
On the Garmin, Satellites 1-32 are GPS, 33-63 are SBAS, 65-88 are Glonass (I think this has increased to 96 for Glonass etensions). I haven't done much reading on the Beidou satellites, but I was sure that the top range was 235. So I'm not sure what the 255 satellite signal is.
I'm guessing here, but given that the 255 satellite only shows up when I have GPS+Glonass enabled, and WAAS/EGNOS on, it could be is one of the other dGPS signals that broadcast on the same L1 frequency, like the John Deere's Starfire system, or Fugro's Starfix, or Ominstar's system. With GPS only, or WAAS/EGNOS off, 255 does not show up.
What I'm not sure about is why it shows up on the eTrex 30 chip but not the Oregon 600 or my other GPS devices.
I've done a bit more testing on the Differentials, and noticed that during the day in Melbourne (I've tested around about midday to 5pm), I rarely seem to get the differential satellites.
The screenshots I took above were taken around about 10pm. Not sure why that would make a difference or whether it was an abberation.
I did some digging around, and thought it might be the Japanese QZSS. I haven't found out the NMEA ID of the QZSS, but they have this nifty tool:
http://qz-vision.jaxa.jp/USE/en/qz_radarIt shows that the QZSS isn't viewable during the day due to it's geo synchronous orbit
http://www.navipedia.net/index.php/File ... 5-0_09.jpg, but is visible on the horizon where I am at night.