Last week, Garmin updated the online Connect website. At first, I thought the change was only cosmetic (layout, etc.), but today I noticed that the updated site uses an elevation correction feature. In Garmin's words:
"Elevation Corrections cross reference the horizontal position (latitude/longitude) provided by the GPS with elevation data that has been acquired by professional surveys. When corrections to elevation data are made, each trackpoint of your activity now contains the elevation from the web service, not the elevation provided by your GPS device.
"Garmin Connect selectively applies corrections to depict a more realistic representation of your elevation experience. Activities recorded from devices without a barometric altimeter are enabled with Elevation Corrections by default. Alternatively, activities recorded by devices with a barometric altimeter generally contain accurate elevation data and therefore Elevation Corrections are disabled by default. For those users who are familiar with the MotionBased Gravity service, this is the same service."
What I'd like to know is whether the corrected or uncorrected altitudes are more accurate.
Two weeks ago, I ran my usual climb out of City Creek twice in a row. According to my old and uncorrected GPS report, I gained 689 feet on the first ascent, lost 579 feet on the first descent, gained 606 feet on the second ascent, and lost 612 feet on the second descent. (Those measurements come from an out and back on the same singletrack, so clearly at least three are inaccurate.)
This morning I ran the same climb once. The new and corrected GPS report showed 764 feet on the ascent and 760 feet on the descent (uncorrected, 681 on the ascent and 675 on the descent). The corrected results are more consistent than those on the old report (although, interestingly, so are the uncorrected results). But what really caught my attention is that the corrected results add 100 feet of climbing over 1.2 miles.
Are there any GPS or topography geeks (and I use the term affectionately
) who can shed some light on GPS accuracy and tell me which measurements I should trust? Obviously, I'd like to think that my climb is 760 feet, but I don't want to pad my numbers, either.