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IF you only want to use the GPS...
if you happen to be extremely rural, the phone will run maximum power to the modem attempting to stay connected to a tower.
.. . (some, including myself would like to use the GPS without using the modem)
LINUX = CHOICES
**BCnAZ**
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You can make the modem not register to a network in hardware, then you only use GPS and have less power usage. I'm not sure if any of the environments expose that option yet though.
Does anyone have a spec sheet for this with model numbers and perhaps links to the interface docs? I'd like to figure out if we can separate the modem and GNSS receiver in software.
Hmm, so the public info sheets available from Quectel in that page don't give GNSS receiver part numbers, or even the manufacturer, for that matter. There are links to two pages that indicate they contain GNSS specs, but they're behind a login screen. Anyone have access to these, or are they NDA'd?
It should be possible to communicate directly with the GNSS receiver using it's manufacturer-specific protocol in order to do things like turn off the receiver while keeping the modem on. The hard part would probably be just configuring the Quectel chip to talk over the correct pins.
Turning off the cell modem but keeping GNSS on may be trickier.