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EOS R6 Mark II Camera GPS Location Off by Miles

WSC33
Contributor

I have an EOS R6 Mark 11 connected to my iPhone 13 for GPS.  The camera GPS is always off by several miles.  Obviously, my iPhone can locate me within a few feet.  Why the huge discrepancy?

Thanks.

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Just in case you are still out there...

Most GPS is formatted as either deg, min, sec.sec, or Deg.deg. That is with fractional degrees or fractional seconds.

Yours is formatted with fractional *minutes*, which is a bit odd.

With the help of my Prime, I figured out how to convert it.

So, somehow, AA°BB'22.1"N is equivalent to 0AA,BB.3670000N.

To convert it, take the fractional part of the minutes and multiply by 60 to turn it into seconds:

.367 * 60 = 22.02, which is pretty close to 22.1 seconds.

It also works for the other:

.7700999 * 60 = 46.206, again, pretty close to 46.1.

 

View solution in original post

17 REPLIES 17

WSC33
Contributor

kvbarkley: how do I label and separate the data?  Commas, descriptors, or what?  

kvbarkley
VIP
VIP

Untitled.jpg

 

Untitled2.jpg

 

Where I took this photo:

IMG_0132.jpg

WSC33
Contributor

Hey,

Thanks so much.  I can do it but not correctly with my data. 

The GPS data from my Canon seems to be in DMS format.  Correct?

This is the actual GPS of my address I pulled off of Google:

Actual GPS: AA°BB'22.1"N DD°EE'46.1"W

Here's the GPS location data from my Canon from a pic shot from home:

It appears in the metadata as 0AA,BB.3670000N and 0DD,EE.7700999W

So my home address and the GPS from my Canon match (with a lead zero) except for the seconds. I can't configure the Canon GPS data in Google for the seconds in a way that doesn't produce an error. How do I do configure the seconds?  (Where does the decimal go?)  And longitude is a long number.

Thanks again.

 

 

Just in case you are still out there...

Most GPS is formatted as either deg, min, sec.sec, or Deg.deg. That is with fractional degrees or fractional seconds.

Yours is formatted with fractional *minutes*, which is a bit odd.

With the help of my Prime, I figured out how to convert it.

So, somehow, AA°BB'22.1"N is equivalent to 0AA,BB.3670000N.

To convert it, take the fractional part of the minutes and multiply by 60 to turn it into seconds:

.367 * 60 = 22.02, which is pretty close to 22.1 seconds.

It also works for the other:

.7700999 * 60 = 46.206, again, pretty close to 46.1.

 

Wow.  You are my hero.  I'm out of town but when I get home, I'll test it out.  Thanks SOOO much....

WSC33
Contributor

This works really well.  When I put in the seconds as they calculated in the gps-coordinates.org website, I got my home address exactly but the seconds changed to something else:

Lat: 22.02 became 22.0194

Lon: 46.206 became 46.05

… and my address pops up.  Why is that? 

Thanks again!

Either some weird round off, or they only return certain GPS coordinates, say every 100 feet or so.

shadowsports
Legend
Legend

Excellent thread guys!

~Rick
Bay Area - CA


~R5 C (1.0.7.1) ~RF Trinity, ~RF 100 Macro, ~RF 100~400, ~RF 100~500, +RF 1.4x TC, +Canon Control Ring, BG-R10, 430EX III-RT ~DxO PhotoLab Elite ~DaVinci Resolve ~Windows11 Pro ~ImageClass MF644Cdw/MF656Cdw ~Pixel 8
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