no, the vehicle actually has to be in motion for the GPS to work. If the GPS senses that it's at the same coordinates as the last reading, then the speed is 0. If the coordinates are different, the GPS does a calculation based on the difference in the coordinates and the time between the samples it took and that gives you the speed.

Richard <img src="/forums/images/graemlins/patriot.gif" alt="" />


Had an 89 Isuzu Pickup
Had a 94 Mitsubishi Eclipse
84 Honda XL185S
Had an 89 Isuzu Trooper w/ 3.4 V6
01 Toyota Tundra SR5 V8 4Door Access Cab
http://community.webshots.com/user/rsayloriii