by David Ferguson on Mon May 23, 2016 5:24 am
Here is an example of a GPS map object in I2 Pro, where I have selected the Google Earth background. There are three laps selected, and you can see the different lines through the turn at the top of the GPS view. Notice that while you can't zoom in on the GPS map directly (well, if you have a cursor shown and press up arrow it does zoom the selected range), it is automatically scaled to show the portion of the lap I selected in another tab.
In the lower right is the track map (with can be created with either distance/lateral G data, or GPS data), it is basically used to help you navigate through your data -- you can click on the map, and the data cursor will move to that spot, or you can click on some other graph object, and the cursor on the map will update to show where the data you are looking at was captured.
So, it's easy to get confused between the "track map" that is used to convert distance into a position on a simplified view of the track, a "track report" which adds data and colored segments to the track map, and the "GPS Track" which is a view of the exact GPS coordinates recorded in the data. They are similar, but have different purposes and uses.
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- I2Pro GPS Map.JPG (208.82 KiB) Viewed 29141 times
David Ferguson
Veracity Racing Data