A friend of mine was on a commercial flight and thought it would be cool to check flight data on his portable GPS. He said that the speed indicated didn't come close to what the pilot announced.
As we talked about it, there seems to be different speeds relevant to some reference point. If the GPS is tracking movement, is it some reference point on the ground, and not actual air speed? Would the data change in relation to the planes' positioning to a certain satellite?
So, we kind of made a comparison of a table saw blade on the arbor. If you drew a straight line from the arbor to one of the teeth, and turned on the saw, there is a difference in speed with relation to a reference point. The tip speed (RPM) would be a whole lot greater than the arbor speed (RPM).
Getting back to the aircraft and the GPS, how is the airspeed figured?
.
As we talked about it, there seems to be different speeds relevant to some reference point. If the GPS is tracking movement, is it some reference point on the ground, and not actual air speed? Would the data change in relation to the planes' positioning to a certain satellite?
So, we kind of made a comparison of a table saw blade on the arbor. If you drew a straight line from the arbor to one of the teeth, and turned on the saw, there is a difference in speed with relation to a reference point. The tip speed (RPM) would be a whole lot greater than the arbor speed (RPM).
Getting back to the aircraft and the GPS, how is the airspeed figured?
.

LCHIEN
Loring in Katy, TX USA
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