Perry wrote:Were those verified with a callibrated wheel? You can't just compare the GPS unit twice. And if you callibrate the wheel, you have to account for whether it's a 440yd track or 400m.
I would never calibrate a wheel using a running track. Most people forget that the distance has to be measured a foot from the curb, etc. I used to measure road race courses (running). We calibrated the wheel using a straight path measured using a high quality steel measuring tape (and, yes, we included the temperature correction). We calibrated the wheel before and after the course measurement and used the difference in our estimate of the error, And, yes, contrary to some claims, there are errors in wheel measurements even on a straight, flat course.
In the simple GPS experiments I discussed, the mileposts on the Lower Sam Merrill trail represent calibrated wheel distances. My GPS agreed with those distances to 1%, and that is a path with many switchbacks.
The other experiment I showed compared tracks obtained by GPS with a trail on a topo map. Map measurements are usually short, but the measurements of the trail and GPS tracks were done the same way. It is the agreement between the GPS tracks and the trail measurement that is significant.
Those little experiments were only intended to show that GPS measurements are generally good enough for hiking, which has been my claim all along. GPS measurements can have problems and there are many discussions of the subject out there. But a measuring wheel is no alternative for hikers. They can be used to measure well-defined, fixed trails, but they are useless for most hiking situations because fewer than 1 in 1,000,000 hikers use a wheel when they deviate from the prescribed path, which is often.
Perry wrote:As far as the fractal nature, the length is relevant to an average walking stride. We have no interest in the hypothetical path of a caterpillar crawling along pebbles and sticks. Well, maybe Fight On is interested in arguing about that...

My point in bringing up fractals is that there is no fixed length for a real path. One needs to set a scale and you are correct in focusing on a scale relevant to human strides. But it is important to realize that measurements with tape, wheel, pedometer, and GPS will all differ with each other and from trial to trial. There are errors in *any* measurement. One quickly realizes that getting a hiking trail mileage to a couple of percent is as good as, or better than, one needs.
Perry wrote:At 35% grade you are looking at a 6% error in distance calculations. This may seem pointless,...
A 20% grade is very steep, as steep as any on Skyline. It is very hard to walk up a 35% grade. When one is traveling on territory with a grade steeper than about 25%, one needs to worry about what you called the 3D effect. But is is easy to take into account to a reasonable degree of approximation. Anyway, I have never heard of someone using a measuring wheel on a 35% grade!
Perry wrote:...but I do think Skyline is longer than 10 miles, finishing at the tram station. But I've never measured it. A few years ago I heard that somebody measured 12 miles from Ramon Road to the tram, but all these GPS-carrying people are saying 10 and 11. It sure doesn't feel like 10.
I have measured around 11 from Ramon Dr. to the Ranger Station several times. I would need to dig out old notes to be more exact than that. It's a hard 11 for sure!