Trimble recently came up with a Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) receiver for agricultural users. Known as the AgGPS 442 GNSS receiver, the state-of-the-art system, going to be demonstrated at the World Ag Exposition in Tulare, California, is claimed to be capable of keeping track of GLONASS and next-generation (GPS) Global Positioning System L2C satellite signals. The latest AgGPS 442 GNSS receiver, with more satellite signals to make access, boasts of improving the farmer’s capability to do work in hard-hitting GPS environs with quicker initialization times, and gives for better production and brought down downtime in the field.
The high-tech GLONASS and GPS L2C processing potential from Trimble brags to develop signal accessibility for elevated accurateness (RTK) real-time kinematic agricultural applications that depends a great deal upon “Z,” or vertical axis satellite positioning data. It also gives support to RTK applications in tricky satellite scenarios for example geographic areas with restricted periods of GPS signal accessibility. Agricultural applications that are able to take advantage of the joint satellite signal potential are included with automated guidance, land leveling and data collection for topographic mapping.










