As far as I know, the lowest price for a receiver that gives you the raw output 
needed for RTK is the NavSpark RAW at $80 (just the bare board, need to have an 
antenna also, and probably an enclosure of some sort).  
http://navspark.mybigcommerce.com/ns-raw-carrier-phase-raw-measurement-output-gps-receiver/

I think single-frequency 20 cm RTK may be possible in ideal conditions, if you 
move slowly enough. That is you have full sky view with no obstacles to block 
or reflect signals. For a ground vehicle that means open country or open field: 
no trees, buildings, etc.  In typical real-life situations you would normally 
use a dual-frequency GPS for that level of resolution (but that is not 
available on your budget).  NOTE: I have not tried RTK myself, only static 
solutions, so I may be wrong about what is achievable.

-John Beale
www.bealecorner.com

>  -------Original Message-------
>  From: Nick <darknovan...@gmail.com>
>  To: foss-gps@lists.osgeo.org
>  Subject: [FOSS-GPS] RTKLIB Vehicle Accuracy
>  Sent: 01 Jul '14 10:24
>  
>  Hello,
>  
>  
>  I am interested in getting an RTK GPS setup working for a moving vehicle,
>  not fast, perhaps 10 mph. I would postprocess the data collected later,
>  using data downloaded from a nearby station.
>  
>  
>  My desire is to log elevation data every few seconds as the vehicle drives.
>  I hope to achieve 10-20 cm accuracy for the position and the elevation.
>  
>  
>  As I research RTKLIB, it seems like most information I come across is
>  regarding a static location. Is my goal feasible to achieve this kind of
>  accuracy as the vehicle moves?
>  
>  
>  If so, can anyone recommend a good board to get me started? I'm hoping
>  to be able to do this for under $200 (just one receiver since the base
>  station is public) -- please give me a reality check if this is unlikely.
>  Thanks,
>  Nick
_______________________________________________
This message is sent to you from FOSS-GPS@lists.osgeo.org mailing list.
Visit http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/foss-gps to manage your 
subscription
For more information, check http://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/FOSS-GPS

Reply via email to