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[[File:AccuracyAndPace.jpg|none|thumb|500px| A plot of GPS precision against pace. The red line is the correlation.]]
There have been reports of GPS accuracy changing with pace, but as you can see from the graph above, my testing does not show this.
=GPS and GLONASS=
I have found that GPS plus GLONASS produces less accuracy than GPS alone, something that is a little counterintuitive. I have no definitive explanation for this, and I do have a working hypothesis. My thought is that enabling both GPS and GLONASS will increase the number of satellites above the horizon, and a modern chipset can have over 50 channels. This means the chipset will have access to far more satellites with both systems enabled. However, I don't believe that the chipset will use all the available satellites when calculating its position. In an urban, or wooded environment, the satellites nearest the horizon will have the weakest signal, and the satellites closest to directly overhead will have the strongest signal. If the chipset were to use only the strongest 5-6 signals, then it's likely to choose the satellites that are closest to being directly overhead. That means the satellites chosen are relatively close together, which is a poor geometry that reduces accuracy. (In GPS terms this is called Dilution of Precision, or DoP.) I've talked to a GPS specialist who tells me that they have seen this in GPS systems they've tested (though not necessarily consumer grade systems.) What this means in the real world is that if you're in an environment with a partial view of the sky due to tree cover for low buildings then GPS on its own is likely to provide better accuracy. If you're in an environment with a clear view of the sky from horizon to horizon, then it's less clear to me which system is likely to provide better accuracy, and I've not tested this in practice. Given that the theoretical accuracy of GLONASS is not quite as good as GPS I'm not sure that enabling both systems will improve matters. It's possible that GLONASS will do relatively better at extreme polar latitudes due to its different orbital patterns.
=GPS Accuracy and Sampling Rate=
GPS watches default to recording a sample frequently enough that accuracy is not compromised. However, several devices offer the option of recording less frequently to improve battery life at the cost of accuracy. These devices actually turn off the GPS receiver, turning it on periodically for just long enough to get a fix. The images below are from the [[2014 Badwater 135]] using the [[Suunto Ambit2| Suunto Ambit2 R]] with recording set to one minute intervals. As you can see, accuracy suffers on curves, but is fine on the straights. For a course like Badwater, the one minute recording interval was fine as the course has few turns.