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Declination, your GPS has nothing to do with the circles, more like the Declination is off in the area you are flying in. You have to move the GPS head in the correct direction to set your Compass to the correct degrees, if set wrong, you will toilet bowl.
See here for your declination http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/geomag-web/#declination you set it by moving the arrow in the direction you require. The front of your quad, then move your GPS head with the little arrow mark where the wire comes out, you move it either to the left of the front of the quad, -° or right +°.
This is mine,
Latitude: 39° 36' 40" N Longitude: 79° 53' 58" W
Date Declination 2013-11-08 9° 8' 16" W changing by 2.1' W per year
As you can see 9° which is a positive number, so I would rotate my head 9° to the right of the front of the quad. I printed out a protractorand used it to gauge my declination.
Some good information on YouTube also...
Hope this helps you....
Thanks guys,
I got it holding nicely now. It actually takes more like 30 degree to stop all toilet bowel symptoms.
Source: http://www.sco.wisc.edu/mapping-topics/magnetic-declination.html[h=2]Using Magnetic Declination[/h]The line of 0° declination currently passes through Wisconsin. Keep in mind that when you are located west of the 0° line-of-declination, the declination is east (or positive). When located east of the 0° line, the declination is west (or negative).
To translate the difference between the geographic and magnetic meridian, the angle of declination must be subtracted from the magnetic north reading. For example, Eau Claire, located west of the 0° line, has a magnetic declination of approximately 1° 30' east (as of 1998). To correct a magnetic compass reading to true north when west of the 0° line, the declination value should be subtracted from the magnetic north reading. When east of the 0° line, you should also subtract the declination from the magnetic north reading, but remember that in this case the declination value is negative. Subtracting a negative number will essentially result in adding the declination value to the magnetic north reading. Where the magnetic declination is zero, a compass needle will point true north.
Well, it don't work. lol
One thing I have noticed is a difference between websites, noaa shows mine as 9° which is a positive number, while http://magnetic-declination.com/ shows me as -9°. So I wonder which is accurate now?