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Scott in Aztlan wrote.
all you have is a radio receiver with an omnidirectional antenna which gives you a signal strength indication, the assumption being that the RSSI is roughly proportional to the line-of-sight distance between the transmiter and the receiver). The idea is to write a computer program to take these position and RSSI values and prodce an estimate of the transmitter's location. Dale DePriest wrote in message ... It is an interesting idea theoretically. You could plot circles on a map from the relative signal strength value and centered on the GPS location, then increase the circle sizes proportionally until they intersect and this will provide a rough idea of the location. With more locations it would be better and better, throwing out some of the circles that don't fit. It will probably work if you live in one of the plains states and have a very sensitive RF meter and lots of driving time. Dale One problem is that when you get close to the transmitter the signal strength meter hits the maximum and ceases to provide useful information. A method for attenuating the signal is useful for this problem. I like the intersecting circle idea. Remember to use the inverse square law for the circle sizes. The power level of the signal will decrease by the square of the distance from the transmitter. Its not linear. A similar concept to the intersecting circles theory is that if you collect a set of data along a straight line (by driving down a straight road) then the transmitter is most likely on a perpendicular line crossing the road at the point where you received the maximum signal. You can work around the "maxing out the signal strength meter" problem by noting the two points on the line where the signal shows maximum and then draw the perpendicular line half way in-between. This idea assumes the transmitter has an omni directional antenna as well. |
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