- Jul 11, 2001
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I have a golf GPS, a Callaway uPro. When I got it a couple years ago I ruminated on how it worked and made some conjectures. I don't remember exactly, but I figured that my golf GPS has to send a signal, which probably includes a unique ID to one or more satellites, and the position of the GPS is calculated and it gets informed from the satellite concerning it's unique position, in this case distance from the front/middle/back of green, and possibly some other details based on the course and hole being played. Am I basically right about this? Would there be several satellites involved?
The golf rangefinders seem to use Lithium batteries whereas the GPS units (at least some of them) use Li-ion rechargeables. I figure that this is because the GPS units, having to communicate with satellites need more power, which is covered by frequent charges, whereas the rangefinders, which only have to bounce laser beams off close-by objects are not so power hungry, and the designers opt for the ease of Lithium batteries (only occasional replacement). I'd prefer a couple of Eneloop 1.5v but the laser rangefinder I just bought uses 3v CR2 Lithiums.
The golf rangefinders seem to use Lithium batteries whereas the GPS units (at least some of them) use Li-ion rechargeables. I figure that this is because the GPS units, having to communicate with satellites need more power, which is covered by frequent charges, whereas the rangefinders, which only have to bounce laser beams off close-by objects are not so power hungry, and the designers opt for the ease of Lithium batteries (only occasional replacement). I'd prefer a couple of Eneloop 1.5v but the laser rangefinder I just bought uses 3v CR2 Lithiums.
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