GPS when flying over the ocean
How can I see my location when flying over an ocean? I know that many airlines show you that on your screen, but I'm wondering if there's a way to do that on a phone, and without an internet connection.
Any OS is fine, Android, iOS, or even Windows Mobile.
I assume this won't be dangerous in any way as the phone would be on flight mode, and GPS is passive.
air-travel maps gps-navigation
New contributor
|
show 10 more comments
How can I see my location when flying over an ocean? I know that many airlines show you that on your screen, but I'm wondering if there's a way to do that on a phone, and without an internet connection.
Any OS is fine, Android, iOS, or even Windows Mobile.
I assume this won't be dangerous in any way as the phone would be on flight mode, and GPS is passive.
air-travel maps gps-navigation
New contributor
1
Does your phone (or tablet with GPS) has a world map connected to the GPS? If so, get a window seat, as farther from the windows GPS is often not working well.
– Willeke♦
2 days ago
@Willeke A world map no. Only limited areas. Google Maps doesn't let downloading an offline map of anywhere close to a transatlantic (US to UK) flight.
– ispiro
2 days ago
1
So the answers can/should include how to get the needed maps as well as which device to use. I usually use my route planner app but that does not include oceans either.
– Willeke♦
2 days ago
What do you mean by "see my location"? The Compass app on iPhone will display your latitude and longitude. Or do you mean you want to see it on a map?
– Nate Eldredge
2 days ago
1
@NateEldredge I mean see it on a map. But the map doesn't have to be exact. I don't need street names for example, just the general shorelines of origin and destination.
– ispiro
2 days ago
|
show 10 more comments
How can I see my location when flying over an ocean? I know that many airlines show you that on your screen, but I'm wondering if there's a way to do that on a phone, and without an internet connection.
Any OS is fine, Android, iOS, or even Windows Mobile.
I assume this won't be dangerous in any way as the phone would be on flight mode, and GPS is passive.
air-travel maps gps-navigation
New contributor
How can I see my location when flying over an ocean? I know that many airlines show you that on your screen, but I'm wondering if there's a way to do that on a phone, and without an internet connection.
Any OS is fine, Android, iOS, or even Windows Mobile.
I assume this won't be dangerous in any way as the phone would be on flight mode, and GPS is passive.
air-travel maps gps-navigation
air-travel maps gps-navigation
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 2 days ago
ispiroispiro
24916
24916
New contributor
New contributor
1
Does your phone (or tablet with GPS) has a world map connected to the GPS? If so, get a window seat, as farther from the windows GPS is often not working well.
– Willeke♦
2 days ago
@Willeke A world map no. Only limited areas. Google Maps doesn't let downloading an offline map of anywhere close to a transatlantic (US to UK) flight.
– ispiro
2 days ago
1
So the answers can/should include how to get the needed maps as well as which device to use. I usually use my route planner app but that does not include oceans either.
– Willeke♦
2 days ago
What do you mean by "see my location"? The Compass app on iPhone will display your latitude and longitude. Or do you mean you want to see it on a map?
– Nate Eldredge
2 days ago
1
@NateEldredge I mean see it on a map. But the map doesn't have to be exact. I don't need street names for example, just the general shorelines of origin and destination.
– ispiro
2 days ago
|
show 10 more comments
1
Does your phone (or tablet with GPS) has a world map connected to the GPS? If so, get a window seat, as farther from the windows GPS is often not working well.
– Willeke♦
2 days ago
@Willeke A world map no. Only limited areas. Google Maps doesn't let downloading an offline map of anywhere close to a transatlantic (US to UK) flight.
– ispiro
2 days ago
1
So the answers can/should include how to get the needed maps as well as which device to use. I usually use my route planner app but that does not include oceans either.
– Willeke♦
2 days ago
What do you mean by "see my location"? The Compass app on iPhone will display your latitude and longitude. Or do you mean you want to see it on a map?
– Nate Eldredge
2 days ago
1
@NateEldredge I mean see it on a map. But the map doesn't have to be exact. I don't need street names for example, just the general shorelines of origin and destination.
– ispiro
2 days ago
1
1
Does your phone (or tablet with GPS) has a world map connected to the GPS? If so, get a window seat, as farther from the windows GPS is often not working well.
– Willeke♦
2 days ago
Does your phone (or tablet with GPS) has a world map connected to the GPS? If so, get a window seat, as farther from the windows GPS is often not working well.
– Willeke♦
2 days ago
@Willeke A world map no. Only limited areas. Google Maps doesn't let downloading an offline map of anywhere close to a transatlantic (US to UK) flight.
– ispiro
2 days ago
@Willeke A world map no. Only limited areas. Google Maps doesn't let downloading an offline map of anywhere close to a transatlantic (US to UK) flight.
– ispiro
2 days ago
1
1
So the answers can/should include how to get the needed maps as well as which device to use. I usually use my route planner app but that does not include oceans either.
– Willeke♦
2 days ago
So the answers can/should include how to get the needed maps as well as which device to use. I usually use my route planner app but that does not include oceans either.
– Willeke♦
2 days ago
What do you mean by "see my location"? The Compass app on iPhone will display your latitude and longitude. Or do you mean you want to see it on a map?
– Nate Eldredge
2 days ago
What do you mean by "see my location"? The Compass app on iPhone will display your latitude and longitude. Or do you mean you want to see it on a map?
– Nate Eldredge
2 days ago
1
1
@NateEldredge I mean see it on a map. But the map doesn't have to be exact. I don't need street names for example, just the general shorelines of origin and destination.
– ispiro
2 days ago
@NateEldredge I mean see it on a map. But the map doesn't have to be exact. I don't need street names for example, just the general shorelines of origin and destination.
– ispiro
2 days ago
|
show 10 more comments
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
There are some things you have to be aware of. For example, you might think that it's enough to turn your GPS on, start your app, and see your position, as simply as that. Well, not really!
First of all, the plane shields from radio waves, so you are almost always forced to keep the phone next to (even against) the window to get your first fix. The farther you are from the window, the harder it is. After the first fix you can usually move a little, but it's hard to tell how much. Just try it. This means you'd better book a window seat.
Then, consider that there's a huge difference between a cold, a warm and a hot start. "Cold" means that your GPS has no idea where the satellites are, because you haven't used it in many days, so it must get the position of the satellites from the satellites themselves, and they transmit it slowly. When you have a data connection the phone can normally download the data from the Internet (this would be "Assisted GPS" or A-GPS), but on board a plane it's normally either not available or very expensive. So: when you are still on the ground, start your GPS app and wait until you have a fix. This will make everything faster (it's the so-called "warm" start).
One more disclaimer: for some reason the altitude measured by a GPS is not accurate at all. Once I compared it with the one shown by the plane's infotainment system, and the difference was more than 500 metres (!!!). It probably doesn't matter, but you might want to know it.
Now the bad part: GPS receivers can be very different from each other, and they can have unexpected problems.
- My first phone with integrated GPS used a receiver (SiRFstarIII) that was top-notch at the time (10 years ago!), and I think I managed to see my position 20% of the times. All the other times it was an eternal wait... The receiver was simply not good enough.
- Then I switched to a phone which used a NovaThor chip. For some reason I've never understood, it worked until the plane reached an altitude of 3950 metres, and then it suddenly stopped working. It had nothing to do with speed, it was just the height. I guess it was some kind of restriction put in place to avoid that the chip could be used to guide missiles, or something like that. Go figure. Anyway, if you happen to have a phone with such restrictions, you are out of luck. And I think the only way to find it out is trying.
- My current phone uses a Snapdragon 625 chipset, and guess what? Altitude is not a problem, but there are others! Quite often it "gets lost": for some reason you start seeing the altitude increasing very slowly (like a couple of metres every 10 seconds), until it finally hangs. Sometimes it helps to close the app and restart it, but it isn't guaranteed.
And all these phones have always worked perfectly when used in a car or on foot, which is what they are designed for. Apparently, the poor reception due to the plane's shielding, combined with the high speed and altitude, gives GPS receivers a hard time. And I don't think there's a way to know how good your GPS will work on a plane, apart from trying it.
Finally, the apps. On Android I use GPS Test. It's free, and it's great for getting the coordinates, altitude and speed, but it doesn't have maps. To see where I am I normally use TomTom with offline maps, which is also free as long as you don't use it to get directions. But obviously the maps don't cover the oceans, so you need something else.
4
Actually GPS reception is BETTER inside the aircraft at altitude comparing to inside a car, for example. It is possible to get reception even in the middle of the aircraft. Tried myself.
– George Y.
2 days ago
3
I didn't know anyone had blocked GPS at that low an altitude. You're right, it's manufacturers not wanting their chips to be used for missile guidance. They also put speed limits on them but those are normally above jetliner speeds.
– Loren Pechtel
2 days ago
7
The display in the plane was probably showing pressure altitude if you were above 15,000 feet or so. It's not the same thing as actual AMSL.
– hobbs
2 days ago
6
The altitude in the infotainment system is not accurate either. It is taken from the barometric altimeter which is set to flight levels, not to altitudes according to local QNH. Notice how the autopilot holds whole thousands of feet. Those are flight levels - levels of constant pressure, NOT constant altitude. You will have a hard time verifying whether the infotainment or the GPS is closer to the actual altitude.
– Vladimir F
yesterday
3
Note that you need "to see" 4 GPS-satellites to calculate the correct altitude. One needs 3 for the place and the 4th for the height.
– IQV
yesterday
|
show 8 more comments
I use OsmAnd for this sort of thing. There's a base world map that's not super detailed at the city level, but is certainly more than adequate for tracking the location of any passenger flight. It's also very helpful for having an accurate, detailed map of your destination before you even figure out how to get cell service after you land.
Thanks. From your answer I also conclude that the built in OS apps don't have this option. +1.
– ispiro
2 days ago
3
@ispiro, you just may to try [maps.me][1] offline map app. I used it in my latest flight. The map is based on OSM data too, but it's in vector. [1]: maps.me/download
– artptr
2 days ago
+1 but why pay for such a thing? overwhelemingly people just use maps.me. start with that, then search for (other) free alternatives, and then maybe pay for one
– Fattie
yesterday
@Fattie: You don't have to pay for it, the free version is more than capable of tracking flights. It's good software, so I chose to support the developers.
– Greg Hewgill
22 hours ago
I see @GregHewgill - thanks for that !!
– Fattie
15 hours ago
add a comment |
I use maps.me for offline maps.
To be able to receive a GPS signal, I have to sit next to a window and push my phone against it. This sometimes works.
add a comment |
While GPS is prohibited by many airlines, such as United, under a broader electronics ban, many/most travelers have GPS enabled inadvertently.
If you are one who has 'forgotten' to turn it off, any GPS app on the phone will give you a location...provided you can reliably receive the signals within the aircraft.
Also, you can see your location retroactively in many regions by using flight tracking services such as FlightAware.com.
2
You can use GPS in 'airplane' mode as your GPS receiver doesn't emit any electromagnetic waves.
– JonathanReez♦
2 days ago
8
As of a couple years ago, airplane mode does not disable the GPS receiver on iOS devices. Tens of thousands of people a day on United flights have phones that have their GPS receivers turned on, regardless of the rules and any theoretical potential for interference.
– Zach Lipton
2 days ago
3
@user71659 Remember all those plane accidents that kept on happening because of LO and IF leakage? No, me neither...
– Aaron F
yesterday
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Willeke♦
14 hours ago
add a comment |
I've used both Here maps and maps.me. It seems Here has much wider coverage. While you can't download maps of oceans, you can still see the real globe when zooming out and know where you are. That's the most important point compared to maps.me (which only zooms out to a world map instead of a globe that you can rotate around)
If you have plenty of space you can download maps for all the continents and get a much more detailed map including a lot of sea areas
Below are some of it in action
- https://youtu.be/PLPXhIWrRxk?t=109
- https://youtu.be/oqiDwICxFZo
Of course it'll be better if there's an offline Earth map. Unfortunately Google Earch doesn't support offline mode and the best you can do is viewing the area to cache it before the trip
- Viewing Google Earth in offline mode
Use of google earth offline in an android device
add a comment |
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There are some things you have to be aware of. For example, you might think that it's enough to turn your GPS on, start your app, and see your position, as simply as that. Well, not really!
First of all, the plane shields from radio waves, so you are almost always forced to keep the phone next to (even against) the window to get your first fix. The farther you are from the window, the harder it is. After the first fix you can usually move a little, but it's hard to tell how much. Just try it. This means you'd better book a window seat.
Then, consider that there's a huge difference between a cold, a warm and a hot start. "Cold" means that your GPS has no idea where the satellites are, because you haven't used it in many days, so it must get the position of the satellites from the satellites themselves, and they transmit it slowly. When you have a data connection the phone can normally download the data from the Internet (this would be "Assisted GPS" or A-GPS), but on board a plane it's normally either not available or very expensive. So: when you are still on the ground, start your GPS app and wait until you have a fix. This will make everything faster (it's the so-called "warm" start).
One more disclaimer: for some reason the altitude measured by a GPS is not accurate at all. Once I compared it with the one shown by the plane's infotainment system, and the difference was more than 500 metres (!!!). It probably doesn't matter, but you might want to know it.
Now the bad part: GPS receivers can be very different from each other, and they can have unexpected problems.
- My first phone with integrated GPS used a receiver (SiRFstarIII) that was top-notch at the time (10 years ago!), and I think I managed to see my position 20% of the times. All the other times it was an eternal wait... The receiver was simply not good enough.
- Then I switched to a phone which used a NovaThor chip. For some reason I've never understood, it worked until the plane reached an altitude of 3950 metres, and then it suddenly stopped working. It had nothing to do with speed, it was just the height. I guess it was some kind of restriction put in place to avoid that the chip could be used to guide missiles, or something like that. Go figure. Anyway, if you happen to have a phone with such restrictions, you are out of luck. And I think the only way to find it out is trying.
- My current phone uses a Snapdragon 625 chipset, and guess what? Altitude is not a problem, but there are others! Quite often it "gets lost": for some reason you start seeing the altitude increasing very slowly (like a couple of metres every 10 seconds), until it finally hangs. Sometimes it helps to close the app and restart it, but it isn't guaranteed.
And all these phones have always worked perfectly when used in a car or on foot, which is what they are designed for. Apparently, the poor reception due to the plane's shielding, combined with the high speed and altitude, gives GPS receivers a hard time. And I don't think there's a way to know how good your GPS will work on a plane, apart from trying it.
Finally, the apps. On Android I use GPS Test. It's free, and it's great for getting the coordinates, altitude and speed, but it doesn't have maps. To see where I am I normally use TomTom with offline maps, which is also free as long as you don't use it to get directions. But obviously the maps don't cover the oceans, so you need something else.
4
Actually GPS reception is BETTER inside the aircraft at altitude comparing to inside a car, for example. It is possible to get reception even in the middle of the aircraft. Tried myself.
– George Y.
2 days ago
3
I didn't know anyone had blocked GPS at that low an altitude. You're right, it's manufacturers not wanting their chips to be used for missile guidance. They also put speed limits on them but those are normally above jetliner speeds.
– Loren Pechtel
2 days ago
7
The display in the plane was probably showing pressure altitude if you were above 15,000 feet or so. It's not the same thing as actual AMSL.
– hobbs
2 days ago
6
The altitude in the infotainment system is not accurate either. It is taken from the barometric altimeter which is set to flight levels, not to altitudes according to local QNH. Notice how the autopilot holds whole thousands of feet. Those are flight levels - levels of constant pressure, NOT constant altitude. You will have a hard time verifying whether the infotainment or the GPS is closer to the actual altitude.
– Vladimir F
yesterday
3
Note that you need "to see" 4 GPS-satellites to calculate the correct altitude. One needs 3 for the place and the 4th for the height.
– IQV
yesterday
|
show 8 more comments
There are some things you have to be aware of. For example, you might think that it's enough to turn your GPS on, start your app, and see your position, as simply as that. Well, not really!
First of all, the plane shields from radio waves, so you are almost always forced to keep the phone next to (even against) the window to get your first fix. The farther you are from the window, the harder it is. After the first fix you can usually move a little, but it's hard to tell how much. Just try it. This means you'd better book a window seat.
Then, consider that there's a huge difference between a cold, a warm and a hot start. "Cold" means that your GPS has no idea where the satellites are, because you haven't used it in many days, so it must get the position of the satellites from the satellites themselves, and they transmit it slowly. When you have a data connection the phone can normally download the data from the Internet (this would be "Assisted GPS" or A-GPS), but on board a plane it's normally either not available or very expensive. So: when you are still on the ground, start your GPS app and wait until you have a fix. This will make everything faster (it's the so-called "warm" start).
One more disclaimer: for some reason the altitude measured by a GPS is not accurate at all. Once I compared it with the one shown by the plane's infotainment system, and the difference was more than 500 metres (!!!). It probably doesn't matter, but you might want to know it.
Now the bad part: GPS receivers can be very different from each other, and they can have unexpected problems.
- My first phone with integrated GPS used a receiver (SiRFstarIII) that was top-notch at the time (10 years ago!), and I think I managed to see my position 20% of the times. All the other times it was an eternal wait... The receiver was simply not good enough.
- Then I switched to a phone which used a NovaThor chip. For some reason I've never understood, it worked until the plane reached an altitude of 3950 metres, and then it suddenly stopped working. It had nothing to do with speed, it was just the height. I guess it was some kind of restriction put in place to avoid that the chip could be used to guide missiles, or something like that. Go figure. Anyway, if you happen to have a phone with such restrictions, you are out of luck. And I think the only way to find it out is trying.
- My current phone uses a Snapdragon 625 chipset, and guess what? Altitude is not a problem, but there are others! Quite often it "gets lost": for some reason you start seeing the altitude increasing very slowly (like a couple of metres every 10 seconds), until it finally hangs. Sometimes it helps to close the app and restart it, but it isn't guaranteed.
And all these phones have always worked perfectly when used in a car or on foot, which is what they are designed for. Apparently, the poor reception due to the plane's shielding, combined with the high speed and altitude, gives GPS receivers a hard time. And I don't think there's a way to know how good your GPS will work on a plane, apart from trying it.
Finally, the apps. On Android I use GPS Test. It's free, and it's great for getting the coordinates, altitude and speed, but it doesn't have maps. To see where I am I normally use TomTom with offline maps, which is also free as long as you don't use it to get directions. But obviously the maps don't cover the oceans, so you need something else.
4
Actually GPS reception is BETTER inside the aircraft at altitude comparing to inside a car, for example. It is possible to get reception even in the middle of the aircraft. Tried myself.
– George Y.
2 days ago
3
I didn't know anyone had blocked GPS at that low an altitude. You're right, it's manufacturers not wanting their chips to be used for missile guidance. They also put speed limits on them but those are normally above jetliner speeds.
– Loren Pechtel
2 days ago
7
The display in the plane was probably showing pressure altitude if you were above 15,000 feet or so. It's not the same thing as actual AMSL.
– hobbs
2 days ago
6
The altitude in the infotainment system is not accurate either. It is taken from the barometric altimeter which is set to flight levels, not to altitudes according to local QNH. Notice how the autopilot holds whole thousands of feet. Those are flight levels - levels of constant pressure, NOT constant altitude. You will have a hard time verifying whether the infotainment or the GPS is closer to the actual altitude.
– Vladimir F
yesterday
3
Note that you need "to see" 4 GPS-satellites to calculate the correct altitude. One needs 3 for the place and the 4th for the height.
– IQV
yesterday
|
show 8 more comments
There are some things you have to be aware of. For example, you might think that it's enough to turn your GPS on, start your app, and see your position, as simply as that. Well, not really!
First of all, the plane shields from radio waves, so you are almost always forced to keep the phone next to (even against) the window to get your first fix. The farther you are from the window, the harder it is. After the first fix you can usually move a little, but it's hard to tell how much. Just try it. This means you'd better book a window seat.
Then, consider that there's a huge difference between a cold, a warm and a hot start. "Cold" means that your GPS has no idea where the satellites are, because you haven't used it in many days, so it must get the position of the satellites from the satellites themselves, and they transmit it slowly. When you have a data connection the phone can normally download the data from the Internet (this would be "Assisted GPS" or A-GPS), but on board a plane it's normally either not available or very expensive. So: when you are still on the ground, start your GPS app and wait until you have a fix. This will make everything faster (it's the so-called "warm" start).
One more disclaimer: for some reason the altitude measured by a GPS is not accurate at all. Once I compared it with the one shown by the plane's infotainment system, and the difference was more than 500 metres (!!!). It probably doesn't matter, but you might want to know it.
Now the bad part: GPS receivers can be very different from each other, and they can have unexpected problems.
- My first phone with integrated GPS used a receiver (SiRFstarIII) that was top-notch at the time (10 years ago!), and I think I managed to see my position 20% of the times. All the other times it was an eternal wait... The receiver was simply not good enough.
- Then I switched to a phone which used a NovaThor chip. For some reason I've never understood, it worked until the plane reached an altitude of 3950 metres, and then it suddenly stopped working. It had nothing to do with speed, it was just the height. I guess it was some kind of restriction put in place to avoid that the chip could be used to guide missiles, or something like that. Go figure. Anyway, if you happen to have a phone with such restrictions, you are out of luck. And I think the only way to find it out is trying.
- My current phone uses a Snapdragon 625 chipset, and guess what? Altitude is not a problem, but there are others! Quite often it "gets lost": for some reason you start seeing the altitude increasing very slowly (like a couple of metres every 10 seconds), until it finally hangs. Sometimes it helps to close the app and restart it, but it isn't guaranteed.
And all these phones have always worked perfectly when used in a car or on foot, which is what they are designed for. Apparently, the poor reception due to the plane's shielding, combined with the high speed and altitude, gives GPS receivers a hard time. And I don't think there's a way to know how good your GPS will work on a plane, apart from trying it.
Finally, the apps. On Android I use GPS Test. It's free, and it's great for getting the coordinates, altitude and speed, but it doesn't have maps. To see where I am I normally use TomTom with offline maps, which is also free as long as you don't use it to get directions. But obviously the maps don't cover the oceans, so you need something else.
There are some things you have to be aware of. For example, you might think that it's enough to turn your GPS on, start your app, and see your position, as simply as that. Well, not really!
First of all, the plane shields from radio waves, so you are almost always forced to keep the phone next to (even against) the window to get your first fix. The farther you are from the window, the harder it is. After the first fix you can usually move a little, but it's hard to tell how much. Just try it. This means you'd better book a window seat.
Then, consider that there's a huge difference between a cold, a warm and a hot start. "Cold" means that your GPS has no idea where the satellites are, because you haven't used it in many days, so it must get the position of the satellites from the satellites themselves, and they transmit it slowly. When you have a data connection the phone can normally download the data from the Internet (this would be "Assisted GPS" or A-GPS), but on board a plane it's normally either not available or very expensive. So: when you are still on the ground, start your GPS app and wait until you have a fix. This will make everything faster (it's the so-called "warm" start).
One more disclaimer: for some reason the altitude measured by a GPS is not accurate at all. Once I compared it with the one shown by the plane's infotainment system, and the difference was more than 500 metres (!!!). It probably doesn't matter, but you might want to know it.
Now the bad part: GPS receivers can be very different from each other, and they can have unexpected problems.
- My first phone with integrated GPS used a receiver (SiRFstarIII) that was top-notch at the time (10 years ago!), and I think I managed to see my position 20% of the times. All the other times it was an eternal wait... The receiver was simply not good enough.
- Then I switched to a phone which used a NovaThor chip. For some reason I've never understood, it worked until the plane reached an altitude of 3950 metres, and then it suddenly stopped working. It had nothing to do with speed, it was just the height. I guess it was some kind of restriction put in place to avoid that the chip could be used to guide missiles, or something like that. Go figure. Anyway, if you happen to have a phone with such restrictions, you are out of luck. And I think the only way to find it out is trying.
- My current phone uses a Snapdragon 625 chipset, and guess what? Altitude is not a problem, but there are others! Quite often it "gets lost": for some reason you start seeing the altitude increasing very slowly (like a couple of metres every 10 seconds), until it finally hangs. Sometimes it helps to close the app and restart it, but it isn't guaranteed.
And all these phones have always worked perfectly when used in a car or on foot, which is what they are designed for. Apparently, the poor reception due to the plane's shielding, combined with the high speed and altitude, gives GPS receivers a hard time. And I don't think there's a way to know how good your GPS will work on a plane, apart from trying it.
Finally, the apps. On Android I use GPS Test. It's free, and it's great for getting the coordinates, altitude and speed, but it doesn't have maps. To see where I am I normally use TomTom with offline maps, which is also free as long as you don't use it to get directions. But obviously the maps don't cover the oceans, so you need something else.
answered 2 days ago
Fabio TuratiFabio Turati
1,20621019
1,20621019
4
Actually GPS reception is BETTER inside the aircraft at altitude comparing to inside a car, for example. It is possible to get reception even in the middle of the aircraft. Tried myself.
– George Y.
2 days ago
3
I didn't know anyone had blocked GPS at that low an altitude. You're right, it's manufacturers not wanting their chips to be used for missile guidance. They also put speed limits on them but those are normally above jetliner speeds.
– Loren Pechtel
2 days ago
7
The display in the plane was probably showing pressure altitude if you were above 15,000 feet or so. It's not the same thing as actual AMSL.
– hobbs
2 days ago
6
The altitude in the infotainment system is not accurate either. It is taken from the barometric altimeter which is set to flight levels, not to altitudes according to local QNH. Notice how the autopilot holds whole thousands of feet. Those are flight levels - levels of constant pressure, NOT constant altitude. You will have a hard time verifying whether the infotainment or the GPS is closer to the actual altitude.
– Vladimir F
yesterday
3
Note that you need "to see" 4 GPS-satellites to calculate the correct altitude. One needs 3 for the place and the 4th for the height.
– IQV
yesterday
|
show 8 more comments
4
Actually GPS reception is BETTER inside the aircraft at altitude comparing to inside a car, for example. It is possible to get reception even in the middle of the aircraft. Tried myself.
– George Y.
2 days ago
3
I didn't know anyone had blocked GPS at that low an altitude. You're right, it's manufacturers not wanting their chips to be used for missile guidance. They also put speed limits on them but those are normally above jetliner speeds.
– Loren Pechtel
2 days ago
7
The display in the plane was probably showing pressure altitude if you were above 15,000 feet or so. It's not the same thing as actual AMSL.
– hobbs
2 days ago
6
The altitude in the infotainment system is not accurate either. It is taken from the barometric altimeter which is set to flight levels, not to altitudes according to local QNH. Notice how the autopilot holds whole thousands of feet. Those are flight levels - levels of constant pressure, NOT constant altitude. You will have a hard time verifying whether the infotainment or the GPS is closer to the actual altitude.
– Vladimir F
yesterday
3
Note that you need "to see" 4 GPS-satellites to calculate the correct altitude. One needs 3 for the place and the 4th for the height.
– IQV
yesterday
4
4
Actually GPS reception is BETTER inside the aircraft at altitude comparing to inside a car, for example. It is possible to get reception even in the middle of the aircraft. Tried myself.
– George Y.
2 days ago
Actually GPS reception is BETTER inside the aircraft at altitude comparing to inside a car, for example. It is possible to get reception even in the middle of the aircraft. Tried myself.
– George Y.
2 days ago
3
3
I didn't know anyone had blocked GPS at that low an altitude. You're right, it's manufacturers not wanting their chips to be used for missile guidance. They also put speed limits on them but those are normally above jetliner speeds.
– Loren Pechtel
2 days ago
I didn't know anyone had blocked GPS at that low an altitude. You're right, it's manufacturers not wanting their chips to be used for missile guidance. They also put speed limits on them but those are normally above jetliner speeds.
– Loren Pechtel
2 days ago
7
7
The display in the plane was probably showing pressure altitude if you were above 15,000 feet or so. It's not the same thing as actual AMSL.
– hobbs
2 days ago
The display in the plane was probably showing pressure altitude if you were above 15,000 feet or so. It's not the same thing as actual AMSL.
– hobbs
2 days ago
6
6
The altitude in the infotainment system is not accurate either. It is taken from the barometric altimeter which is set to flight levels, not to altitudes according to local QNH. Notice how the autopilot holds whole thousands of feet. Those are flight levels - levels of constant pressure, NOT constant altitude. You will have a hard time verifying whether the infotainment or the GPS is closer to the actual altitude.
– Vladimir F
yesterday
The altitude in the infotainment system is not accurate either. It is taken from the barometric altimeter which is set to flight levels, not to altitudes according to local QNH. Notice how the autopilot holds whole thousands of feet. Those are flight levels - levels of constant pressure, NOT constant altitude. You will have a hard time verifying whether the infotainment or the GPS is closer to the actual altitude.
– Vladimir F
yesterday
3
3
Note that you need "to see" 4 GPS-satellites to calculate the correct altitude. One needs 3 for the place and the 4th for the height.
– IQV
yesterday
Note that you need "to see" 4 GPS-satellites to calculate the correct altitude. One needs 3 for the place and the 4th for the height.
– IQV
yesterday
|
show 8 more comments
I use OsmAnd for this sort of thing. There's a base world map that's not super detailed at the city level, but is certainly more than adequate for tracking the location of any passenger flight. It's also very helpful for having an accurate, detailed map of your destination before you even figure out how to get cell service after you land.
Thanks. From your answer I also conclude that the built in OS apps don't have this option. +1.
– ispiro
2 days ago
3
@ispiro, you just may to try [maps.me][1] offline map app. I used it in my latest flight. The map is based on OSM data too, but it's in vector. [1]: maps.me/download
– artptr
2 days ago
+1 but why pay for such a thing? overwhelemingly people just use maps.me. start with that, then search for (other) free alternatives, and then maybe pay for one
– Fattie
yesterday
@Fattie: You don't have to pay for it, the free version is more than capable of tracking flights. It's good software, so I chose to support the developers.
– Greg Hewgill
22 hours ago
I see @GregHewgill - thanks for that !!
– Fattie
15 hours ago
add a comment |
I use OsmAnd for this sort of thing. There's a base world map that's not super detailed at the city level, but is certainly more than adequate for tracking the location of any passenger flight. It's also very helpful for having an accurate, detailed map of your destination before you even figure out how to get cell service after you land.
Thanks. From your answer I also conclude that the built in OS apps don't have this option. +1.
– ispiro
2 days ago
3
@ispiro, you just may to try [maps.me][1] offline map app. I used it in my latest flight. The map is based on OSM data too, but it's in vector. [1]: maps.me/download
– artptr
2 days ago
+1 but why pay for such a thing? overwhelemingly people just use maps.me. start with that, then search for (other) free alternatives, and then maybe pay for one
– Fattie
yesterday
@Fattie: You don't have to pay for it, the free version is more than capable of tracking flights. It's good software, so I chose to support the developers.
– Greg Hewgill
22 hours ago
I see @GregHewgill - thanks for that !!
– Fattie
15 hours ago
add a comment |
I use OsmAnd for this sort of thing. There's a base world map that's not super detailed at the city level, but is certainly more than adequate for tracking the location of any passenger flight. It's also very helpful for having an accurate, detailed map of your destination before you even figure out how to get cell service after you land.
I use OsmAnd for this sort of thing. There's a base world map that's not super detailed at the city level, but is certainly more than adequate for tracking the location of any passenger flight. It's also very helpful for having an accurate, detailed map of your destination before you even figure out how to get cell service after you land.
answered 2 days ago
Greg HewgillGreg Hewgill
25.6k26797
25.6k26797
Thanks. From your answer I also conclude that the built in OS apps don't have this option. +1.
– ispiro
2 days ago
3
@ispiro, you just may to try [maps.me][1] offline map app. I used it in my latest flight. The map is based on OSM data too, but it's in vector. [1]: maps.me/download
– artptr
2 days ago
+1 but why pay for such a thing? overwhelemingly people just use maps.me. start with that, then search for (other) free alternatives, and then maybe pay for one
– Fattie
yesterday
@Fattie: You don't have to pay for it, the free version is more than capable of tracking flights. It's good software, so I chose to support the developers.
– Greg Hewgill
22 hours ago
I see @GregHewgill - thanks for that !!
– Fattie
15 hours ago
add a comment |
Thanks. From your answer I also conclude that the built in OS apps don't have this option. +1.
– ispiro
2 days ago
3
@ispiro, you just may to try [maps.me][1] offline map app. I used it in my latest flight. The map is based on OSM data too, but it's in vector. [1]: maps.me/download
– artptr
2 days ago
+1 but why pay for such a thing? overwhelemingly people just use maps.me. start with that, then search for (other) free alternatives, and then maybe pay for one
– Fattie
yesterday
@Fattie: You don't have to pay for it, the free version is more than capable of tracking flights. It's good software, so I chose to support the developers.
– Greg Hewgill
22 hours ago
I see @GregHewgill - thanks for that !!
– Fattie
15 hours ago
Thanks. From your answer I also conclude that the built in OS apps don't have this option. +1.
– ispiro
2 days ago
Thanks. From your answer I also conclude that the built in OS apps don't have this option. +1.
– ispiro
2 days ago
3
3
@ispiro, you just may to try [maps.me][1] offline map app. I used it in my latest flight. The map is based on OSM data too, but it's in vector. [1]: maps.me/download
– artptr
2 days ago
@ispiro, you just may to try [maps.me][1] offline map app. I used it in my latest flight. The map is based on OSM data too, but it's in vector. [1]: maps.me/download
– artptr
2 days ago
+1 but why pay for such a thing? overwhelemingly people just use maps.me. start with that, then search for (other) free alternatives, and then maybe pay for one
– Fattie
yesterday
+1 but why pay for such a thing? overwhelemingly people just use maps.me. start with that, then search for (other) free alternatives, and then maybe pay for one
– Fattie
yesterday
@Fattie: You don't have to pay for it, the free version is more than capable of tracking flights. It's good software, so I chose to support the developers.
– Greg Hewgill
22 hours ago
@Fattie: You don't have to pay for it, the free version is more than capable of tracking flights. It's good software, so I chose to support the developers.
– Greg Hewgill
22 hours ago
I see @GregHewgill - thanks for that !!
– Fattie
15 hours ago
I see @GregHewgill - thanks for that !!
– Fattie
15 hours ago
add a comment |
I use maps.me for offline maps.
To be able to receive a GPS signal, I have to sit next to a window and push my phone against it. This sometimes works.
add a comment |
I use maps.me for offline maps.
To be able to receive a GPS signal, I have to sit next to a window and push my phone against it. This sometimes works.
add a comment |
I use maps.me for offline maps.
To be able to receive a GPS signal, I have to sit next to a window and push my phone against it. This sometimes works.
I use maps.me for offline maps.
To be able to receive a GPS signal, I have to sit next to a window and push my phone against it. This sometimes works.
answered yesterday
MastaBabaMastaBaba
19.2k4978
19.2k4978
add a comment |
add a comment |
While GPS is prohibited by many airlines, such as United, under a broader electronics ban, many/most travelers have GPS enabled inadvertently.
If you are one who has 'forgotten' to turn it off, any GPS app on the phone will give you a location...provided you can reliably receive the signals within the aircraft.
Also, you can see your location retroactively in many regions by using flight tracking services such as FlightAware.com.
2
You can use GPS in 'airplane' mode as your GPS receiver doesn't emit any electromagnetic waves.
– JonathanReez♦
2 days ago
8
As of a couple years ago, airplane mode does not disable the GPS receiver on iOS devices. Tens of thousands of people a day on United flights have phones that have their GPS receivers turned on, regardless of the rules and any theoretical potential for interference.
– Zach Lipton
2 days ago
3
@user71659 Remember all those plane accidents that kept on happening because of LO and IF leakage? No, me neither...
– Aaron F
yesterday
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Willeke♦
14 hours ago
add a comment |
While GPS is prohibited by many airlines, such as United, under a broader electronics ban, many/most travelers have GPS enabled inadvertently.
If you are one who has 'forgotten' to turn it off, any GPS app on the phone will give you a location...provided you can reliably receive the signals within the aircraft.
Also, you can see your location retroactively in many regions by using flight tracking services such as FlightAware.com.
2
You can use GPS in 'airplane' mode as your GPS receiver doesn't emit any electromagnetic waves.
– JonathanReez♦
2 days ago
8
As of a couple years ago, airplane mode does not disable the GPS receiver on iOS devices. Tens of thousands of people a day on United flights have phones that have their GPS receivers turned on, regardless of the rules and any theoretical potential for interference.
– Zach Lipton
2 days ago
3
@user71659 Remember all those plane accidents that kept on happening because of LO and IF leakage? No, me neither...
– Aaron F
yesterday
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Willeke♦
14 hours ago
add a comment |
While GPS is prohibited by many airlines, such as United, under a broader electronics ban, many/most travelers have GPS enabled inadvertently.
If you are one who has 'forgotten' to turn it off, any GPS app on the phone will give you a location...provided you can reliably receive the signals within the aircraft.
Also, you can see your location retroactively in many regions by using flight tracking services such as FlightAware.com.
While GPS is prohibited by many airlines, such as United, under a broader electronics ban, many/most travelers have GPS enabled inadvertently.
If you are one who has 'forgotten' to turn it off, any GPS app on the phone will give you a location...provided you can reliably receive the signals within the aircraft.
Also, you can see your location retroactively in many regions by using flight tracking services such as FlightAware.com.
edited 2 days ago
answered 2 days ago
Johns-305Johns-305
29.2k15797
29.2k15797
2
You can use GPS in 'airplane' mode as your GPS receiver doesn't emit any electromagnetic waves.
– JonathanReez♦
2 days ago
8
As of a couple years ago, airplane mode does not disable the GPS receiver on iOS devices. Tens of thousands of people a day on United flights have phones that have their GPS receivers turned on, regardless of the rules and any theoretical potential for interference.
– Zach Lipton
2 days ago
3
@user71659 Remember all those plane accidents that kept on happening because of LO and IF leakage? No, me neither...
– Aaron F
yesterday
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Willeke♦
14 hours ago
add a comment |
2
You can use GPS in 'airplane' mode as your GPS receiver doesn't emit any electromagnetic waves.
– JonathanReez♦
2 days ago
8
As of a couple years ago, airplane mode does not disable the GPS receiver on iOS devices. Tens of thousands of people a day on United flights have phones that have their GPS receivers turned on, regardless of the rules and any theoretical potential for interference.
– Zach Lipton
2 days ago
3
@user71659 Remember all those plane accidents that kept on happening because of LO and IF leakage? No, me neither...
– Aaron F
yesterday
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Willeke♦
14 hours ago
2
2
You can use GPS in 'airplane' mode as your GPS receiver doesn't emit any electromagnetic waves.
– JonathanReez♦
2 days ago
You can use GPS in 'airplane' mode as your GPS receiver doesn't emit any electromagnetic waves.
– JonathanReez♦
2 days ago
8
8
As of a couple years ago, airplane mode does not disable the GPS receiver on iOS devices. Tens of thousands of people a day on United flights have phones that have their GPS receivers turned on, regardless of the rules and any theoretical potential for interference.
– Zach Lipton
2 days ago
As of a couple years ago, airplane mode does not disable the GPS receiver on iOS devices. Tens of thousands of people a day on United flights have phones that have their GPS receivers turned on, regardless of the rules and any theoretical potential for interference.
– Zach Lipton
2 days ago
3
3
@user71659 Remember all those plane accidents that kept on happening because of LO and IF leakage? No, me neither...
– Aaron F
yesterday
@user71659 Remember all those plane accidents that kept on happening because of LO and IF leakage? No, me neither...
– Aaron F
yesterday
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Willeke♦
14 hours ago
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Willeke♦
14 hours ago
add a comment |
I've used both Here maps and maps.me. It seems Here has much wider coverage. While you can't download maps of oceans, you can still see the real globe when zooming out and know where you are. That's the most important point compared to maps.me (which only zooms out to a world map instead of a globe that you can rotate around)
If you have plenty of space you can download maps for all the continents and get a much more detailed map including a lot of sea areas
Below are some of it in action
- https://youtu.be/PLPXhIWrRxk?t=109
- https://youtu.be/oqiDwICxFZo
Of course it'll be better if there's an offline Earth map. Unfortunately Google Earch doesn't support offline mode and the best you can do is viewing the area to cache it before the trip
- Viewing Google Earth in offline mode
Use of google earth offline in an android device
add a comment |
I've used both Here maps and maps.me. It seems Here has much wider coverage. While you can't download maps of oceans, you can still see the real globe when zooming out and know where you are. That's the most important point compared to maps.me (which only zooms out to a world map instead of a globe that you can rotate around)
If you have plenty of space you can download maps for all the continents and get a much more detailed map including a lot of sea areas
Below are some of it in action
- https://youtu.be/PLPXhIWrRxk?t=109
- https://youtu.be/oqiDwICxFZo
Of course it'll be better if there's an offline Earth map. Unfortunately Google Earch doesn't support offline mode and the best you can do is viewing the area to cache it before the trip
- Viewing Google Earth in offline mode
Use of google earth offline in an android device
add a comment |
I've used both Here maps and maps.me. It seems Here has much wider coverage. While you can't download maps of oceans, you can still see the real globe when zooming out and know where you are. That's the most important point compared to maps.me (which only zooms out to a world map instead of a globe that you can rotate around)
If you have plenty of space you can download maps for all the continents and get a much more detailed map including a lot of sea areas
Below are some of it in action
- https://youtu.be/PLPXhIWrRxk?t=109
- https://youtu.be/oqiDwICxFZo
Of course it'll be better if there's an offline Earth map. Unfortunately Google Earch doesn't support offline mode and the best you can do is viewing the area to cache it before the trip
- Viewing Google Earth in offline mode
Use of google earth offline in an android device
I've used both Here maps and maps.me. It seems Here has much wider coverage. While you can't download maps of oceans, you can still see the real globe when zooming out and know where you are. That's the most important point compared to maps.me (which only zooms out to a world map instead of a globe that you can rotate around)
If you have plenty of space you can download maps for all the continents and get a much more detailed map including a lot of sea areas
Below are some of it in action
- https://youtu.be/PLPXhIWrRxk?t=109
- https://youtu.be/oqiDwICxFZo
Of course it'll be better if there's an offline Earth map. Unfortunately Google Earch doesn't support offline mode and the best you can do is viewing the area to cache it before the trip
- Viewing Google Earth in offline mode
Use of google earth offline in an android device
answered 2 days ago
phuclvphuclv
324112
324112
add a comment |
add a comment |
ispiro is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
ispiro is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
ispiro is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
ispiro is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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1
Does your phone (or tablet with GPS) has a world map connected to the GPS? If so, get a window seat, as farther from the windows GPS is often not working well.
– Willeke♦
2 days ago
@Willeke A world map no. Only limited areas. Google Maps doesn't let downloading an offline map of anywhere close to a transatlantic (US to UK) flight.
– ispiro
2 days ago
1
So the answers can/should include how to get the needed maps as well as which device to use. I usually use my route planner app but that does not include oceans either.
– Willeke♦
2 days ago
What do you mean by "see my location"? The Compass app on iPhone will display your latitude and longitude. Or do you mean you want to see it on a map?
– Nate Eldredge
2 days ago
1
@NateEldredge I mean see it on a map. But the map doesn't have to be exact. I don't need street names for example, just the general shorelines of origin and destination.
– ispiro
2 days ago