Table of Contents

Altitude Manager


Altitude Manager enables you to fine-tune the altitude values Locus Map receives from your mobile device. It is divided into three main tabs:

Settings

Contains general switches of offset and pressure sensor and settings of elevation data assistance and altitude measurement filter:

Elevation data

Available only with Premium

Warning for pilots: optimizing or replacing GPS altitude by elevation data is not recommended for activities when you are not moving on the ground - displayed altitude values are influenced by the ground altitude measuring and calculation

Altitude filter

Applies a filter to altitude measurement to reduce deviations. Heavier filters cause less fuzzy altitude values but slower reactions to altitude changes. The scale ranges from no filtration to an ultra-heavy filter.

Altitude offset

Altitude calculated by internal or external (Bluetooth) GPS unit is related to a different method of referencing the Earth's surface than that used in maps. The difference between them is called Geoid height which is the distance between Geoid and reference elipsoid.

Locus Map can define this offset by three methods:

Pressure sensor

Some devices are equipped with a barometric pressure sensor. Barometric sensors measure atmospheric pressure very precisely which can be used for calculating relative altitude changes. I.e. if you know certain pressure at a certain altitude you can calculate altitude changes between the known and current position.

The pressure sensor must be calibrated to a known altitude value so that it can be used for real altitude value calculations. Locus Map offers several methods:

Some devices e.g. Samsung Galaxy Note II turn off the pressure sensor in standby mode. If you want to use a pressure sensor during e.g. track recording, make sure your device maintains the pressure sensor on also when the screen goes off.

Altitude measurement workflow

Locus Map applies the above-mentioned computations in the following order:

If step 2 is missing, the pressure sensor calibration uses directly received altitude values.

The recommended setup is using elevation data (fully replacing GNSS) without a pressure sensor or using the elevation data only to optimize altitude (useful to eliminate unwanted peaks) + pressure sensor if it's available.