▲ | TrueDuality 6 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
They do but without information from additional locations all you can get is distance and sometimes direction (dependent on specific chip / circuit). The ones with direction will probably good enough for most boating awareness situations. If you want to know more specifically you need to have separate sensors that have with reasonably synchronized clocks so they can trilaterate or triangulate strike locations. Those sensors probably need to be further away from each other than most boats allow for. The further away the sensors are from each other, the tighter the time synchronization between them, and the more sensors you have will determine the overall accuracy your system will be able to attain. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | duskwuff 6 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> so they can trilaterate or triangulate strike locations I don't think that's feasible. These sensors work by detecting radio waves which propagate near the speed of light. Even if you had two sensors separated by 1 km, they'd both receive the radio signal within ~3 µs of each other. I don't think the sensors guarantee detection time to that level of precision, nor that it's feasible to keep clocks sufficiently synchronized that you can timestamp events at a sub-microsecond level. | |||||||||||||||||
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