I flew commercial this weekend and here's some interesting findings discovered. WingsX locked GPS sats on the ground ALL the way up to our cruise alt of 36000ft!
WOW, WOW, WOW!
This naturally suggests there is GPS signals being received INSIDE the Faraday cage of the airliner!
Only after I interrupted WingsX (and restarted it again) did it fail to re-acquire lock on GPS sats!.
Upon suggestion of "scarcherpilot" + "Doug Reid"(thanks!) I also downloaded some GPS analysis app to check against what WingsX is getting. The app also reflected same as what WingsX was encountering.
During decent through 27000ft-ish did both WingsX and GPS app come alive with data.
iPad was purposely put in Airplane mode for the duration of the experiment. No Bluetooth, no wifi no cellular.
I have a WiFi only iPad. I've used an XGPS150 for maybe 7 years, including on airlines. It's GPS only, no AHRS or ADS-B In, and sells for less than $100.
(Yes, I also have a Stratux for those few times I'm not flying something which already has a usable ADS-B and GPS and I care about having more than just location. But I can't imagine pulling my Stratux out on an airline when I can just strap the XGPS on my arm.)
Thanks, this does look like a viable option as well.
I have a wifi only ipad. Before my plane had a GPS ADSB i could connect to (GNX375), i used a Bad Elf as well. Got me 2/3rds of the way across the country with no problems. Takes a minute or two to acquire the satellites and there is an app that goes with it to show you how many satellites it is finding. I think i paid $99 for it and it works like a champ when i have needed it. Never tried it on an airliner, but it is very tiny so it doesnt take up a bunch of room or likely arouse any suspicion from a flight attendant or Barny Fife TSA agent.
Thanks for suggesting a GPS app, added valuable proof to what was going on. Also keen on adding a cheapish GPS bluetooth, pity the Bad Elf is sooo pricy. I tried re-acquiring the GPS sats all along the flight and at no time could my iPad re-acquire and lock for the duration of the rest of the flight despite numerous restarts during remaining 2 hours at cruise.
I might get a signal, and even a fix, at an aisle seat for a while, but I won't keep it, and I haven't been able to get another fix once the initial fix was lost.
About the only time I've wished for the ADSB in was to know if another plane would be in sight so I can set up to get a picture; other aircraft are usually visible for only a few seconds from a passenger's perspective and they are usually gone or at a bad angle by the time I grab my camera. The GPS has been much more helpful in showing where we are going so I can tell if there is something interesting to image or look at. The GPS is better for my purposes but I recognize your needs may be different.
Same experience found, couldn't re-acquire lock on GPS sats once lost.
If you have a cellular capable ipad, you have pretty decent gps capability. It is interesting to me that you get gps on the ground and not in flight above 12k. The gps sats are in orbit, not on the ground...maybe you are not using the internal gps, but using wifi location info instead. Why not try a gps diagnostic app first to verify your gps is an issue ?
Have the latest iteration of iPad and as stated earlier was able to acquire lock on GPS sats well into cruise at 36000ft.
This naturally suggests there is GPS signals being received INSIDE the Faraday cage of the airliner!
Only when WingsX (and GPS app) closed down and restarted was it not able to reacquire lock on GPS sats. iPad was purposely put in Airplane mode for the duration of the experiment.
WingsX and GPS app did come alive with GPS lock and ensuing data in descent through 27000ft-ish.
The difference on my iPhone for position acquisition between a window or aisle seat is time. It take longer in the aisle. If your iPad isn’t picking up signal I’d guess you have an older iPad. My Mini 4 doesn’t do anything as well as my iPad Pro, including receive GPS. My Pro works fine on airliners, too. My Mini lives on my Cessna’s panel and does everything I need it to do in that plane.
If you’re in the market for a supplemental GPS receiver look to add ADHRS. That’s a valuable tool. If all you want is to see where you are while on an airliner? Try upgrading your iPad or get a cheap external receiver like a Garmin Glo.
Agreed, I'm pretty certain an acquisition lock on GPS sats will certainly improve sitting window seat, although this is not where I prefer to seat myself when flying commercial.
Merely a matter of doing some research into what GPS bluetooth to get. Interesting times indeed!