Why Is My RTK Accuracy Dropping? Complete Diagnosis Guide
RTK accuracy degrades for four main reasons: the solution has dropped from Fixed to Float without the operator noticing, multipath interference is corrupting satellite signals, the baseline to the reference station is too long, or there is a coordinate system mismatch in the project settings. Confirm Fixed status first — Float positioning carries 300–1000 mm of error regardless of all other settings.
- Fixed vs Float: The Root of Most Accuracy Problems
- Problem 1: Undetected Float Solution
- Problem 2: Multipath Interference
- Problem 3: Long Baseline / CORS Range Exceeded
- Problem 4: Ionospheric and Tropospheric Conditions
- Problem 5: Antenna Height Error
- Problem 6: Coordinate System / Datum Mismatch
- Quick Reference Accuracy Diagnosis Table
- FAQ
You spend a full day in the field, collect fifty points across a site, drive back to the office, import the data — and discover that every single coordinate is 30–80 cm off the known control points. The GNSS receiver showed bars, the NTRIP client was connected, and nothing looked obviously wrong in the field. What happened?
RTK accuracy problems are rarely about hardware failure. They are almost always about configuration, the local environment, or — most commonly — a Float solution that was mistaken for Fixed. This guide isolates six distinct causes in diagnostic order, giving you a step‑by‑step path back to centimetre‑level confidence.
Fixed vs Float — The Root of Most Accuracy Problems
Every RTK solution is either Fixed or Float. The difference in positional error is two orders of magnitude.
Fixed solution = integer ambiguities resolved. The receiver has locked the carrier‑phase cycles unambiguously. Typical horizontal accuracy: ±8 mm. Vertical: ±15 mm.
Float solution = ambiguities not resolved. The receiver is still estimating fractional cycles. Typical horizontal accuracy: ±300–1000 mm (3–10 cm to 1 m of error).
The solution status indicator on your controller is the single most important number on the screen. Many operators mistake a green "connected" icon for a Fixed solution — they are two completely different things. In ApekSurv, Fixed shows as "Fixed", Float as "Float", and no solution as "Single". Never record precision survey points in Float mode.
Problem 1 — Undetected Float Solution
Coordinates look plausible but are consistently 30–80 cm off control points. The NTRIP connection is active. The receiver appears to be working normally.
The solution never resolved to Fixed, or dropped from Fixed to Float mid‑survey without a visible alarm.
- Check solution status explicitly before every recording session. In ApekSurv, the solution type is displayed as text in the status bar. Do not rely on the network connection indicator alone.
- Set a minimum accuracy threshold alert. Most RTK survey software allows you to configure an alarm if horizontal RMS exceeds a defined threshold. Set this to 30 mm for precision survey work.
- If the solution is Float, check differential age. If above 3 seconds, the correction data stream has been interrupted. Reconnect the NTRIP client and wait for Fixed before resuming.
- If Fixed was achieved but then dropped, move to an area with better sky visibility and allow 2–3 minutes for reinitialisation.
Problem 2 — Multipath Interference
Fixed solution is achieved, but recorded coordinates jump by 10–50 mm between adjacent measurements at the same physical point.
Satellite signals bounce off nearby reflective surfaces (metal roofing, chain‑link fences, glass facades, parked vehicles, water bodies) before reaching the antenna, introducing systematic timing errors.
- Identify and move away from multipath sources. A 3–5 metre repositioning can dramatically change multipath geometry.
- Set elevation mask to 10–15°. Satellites near the horizon transmit through the thickest atmospheric cross‑section and are most prone to multipath. Cutting low‑horizon signals improves solution quality even if it slightly reduces satellite count.
- Enable the APEKS 120° IMU tilt compensation only after achieving a clean Fixed solution. IMU tilt works correctly in Fixed mode; in Float mode it applies accurate tilt correction to an already‑degraded position.
- Re‑observe known control points. If your final survey RMS on control points exceeds 20–30 mm horizontal after repositioning, the environment may be too compromised for single‑session RTK — consider static GNSS observation for that location.
Problem 3 — Long Baseline / CORS Range Exceeded
Fixed is achieved near populated areas but drops to Float in the outer parts of the survey block, or on project sites more than 50 km from the city.
Most CORS networks guarantee reliable Fixed solutions within 50–70 km of the nearest physical reference station. Beyond this range, atmospheric decorrelation between the rover and reference station degrades the correction accuracy.
- Check the coverage map for your CORS provider. Most national networks publish interactive maps showing reference station locations and guaranteed coverage polygons. Confirm your project site falls within the polygon.
- Select the closest available Mountpoint. If multiple mountpoints are listed, always select the one geographically nearest to your project site — even a 10 km difference in baseline length can make the difference between Fixed and Float in marginal coverage zones.
- If no CORS mountpoint is within 50 km, deploy a self‑deployed base station. Use any APEKS RTK receiver as a base with 2W UHF radio for sites within 15 km, or the APEKS MAX5 with 5W LoRa for sites up to 25 km.
Problem 4 — Ionospheric and Tropospheric Conditions
Accuracy is good in the morning but degrades to Float in the afternoon, or suddenly worsens on days following solar activity.
The ionosphere and troposphere introduce atmospheric delays that GNSS receivers must model and correct. During periods of high ionospheric activity — particularly near the equator during solar maximum — residual atmospheric errors can exceed the corrections being applied.
- Plan precision surveys for early morning hours (06:00–10:00 local time) when ionospheric activity is typically lowest. Avoid post‑noon sessions for highest‑precision work in equatorial survey regions including Indonesia, Malaysia, and East Africa.
- Check GNSS space weather status. Services such as the US Space Weather Prediction Center (swpc.noaa.gov) publish Kp indices — values above 5 indicate geomagnetic storm conditions that significantly degrade RTK performance globally.
- Shorten the baseline. Atmospheric decorrelation scales with distance. Moving the base station 10 km closer to the survey area reduces atmospheric error contribution proportionally.
Problem 5 — Antenna Height Entry Error
Horizontal coordinates check correctly against control, but all elevation values are consistently wrong by a fixed offset — for example, every point is 0.15 m too low or 0.23 m too high.
The antenna height was entered incorrectly, or the wrong measurement reference was used (slant height vs vertical height).
- Confirm the measurement reference. APEKS receivers require the vertical height from the ground mark to the antenna reference point (ARP), which is marked on the receiver body. If your pole has a built‑in height of 2.0 m and you add a tribrach and tribrach adapter, the total vertical height must account for all components.
- Re‑measure all heights on site if there is any doubt. A systematic elevation error that is consistent across all points is almost always an antenna height entry problem, not a satellite geometry problem.
- Use the APEKS APS1 handheld RTK or a known benchmark to verify elevation independently before starting a precision levelling survey.
Problem 6 — Coordinate System / Datum Mismatch
RTK shows Fixed with excellent RMS, but coordinates do not match existing survey data or national grid marks by metres.
The project is configured with the wrong geodetic datum or projection, or the geoid model applied to convert ellipsoidal heights to orthometric heights is incorrect for the country.
- Confirm the datum in ApekSurv project settings matches the CORS broadcast datum and your existing survey data. Country reference: Indonesia = DGN95/WGS84; Saudi Arabia = GCS‑80; South Africa = Hartebeesthoek94; Brazil = SIRGAS2000; Turkey = TUREF/ITRF96.
- Apply the correct geoid model. Ellipsoidal height and orthometric (sea‑level referenced) height can differ by 30–60 metres in some regions. Without the correct national geoid model applied in ApekSurv, all elevation data will carry a systematic error.
- Verify against a known control point before beginning productive survey. Checking coordinates against one national grid monument at the start of each session takes 5 minutes and prevents hours of office rework.
Quick Reference — RTK Accuracy Diagnosis Table
| Symptom | Root Cause | First Action |
|---|---|---|
| Coords off by 30–80 cm | Float solution, not Fixed | Check solution status |
| Good in morning, bad afternoon | Ionospheric activity | Check Kp index, resurvey AM |
| Coords jump between repeated obs | Multipath interference | Move 3–5 m from reflective surfaces |
| Fixed but elevation consistently off | Antenna height entry error | Re‑measure height, check ARP |
| All coords off by metres | Datum/projection mismatch | Verify project CS in ApekSurv |
| Fixed drops at far end of site | CORS baseline too long | Select nearer mountpoint or deploy local base |
| Accurate horizontal, wrong elevation | Geoid model not applied | Apply national geoid model |
| Intermittent Fixed dropouts | Differential age >3 s | Check NTRIP connection, enable auto‑reconnect |
Accuracy diagnosis flowchart
FAQ — Your RTK accuracy questions answered
What is the accuracy difference between Fixed and Float RTK?
Why does my RTK show Fixed but coordinates are still wrong?
How do I know if multipath is affecting my survey?
Can I survey during ionospheric storms?
What is the maximum reliable CORS baseline for centimetre accuracy?
FIXED. ACCURATE. EVERY POINT.
APEKS RTK receivers track 1408 channels across 7 constellations with 120° calibration‑free IMU and global OTA firmware — no geo‑fence restrictions. Accurate in Jakarta, Riyadh, São Paulo, or wherever your survey demands precision.
Explore APEKS RTK Receivers →References
- ISO 17123-8:2015 — Field Procedures for GNSS RTK
- RTCM Standard 10403.3 — Differential GNSS Services
- US NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center — swpc.noaa.gov
- IGS Real-Time Service — igs.org/rts
- APEKS AP40 Laser+ Technical Datasheet, 2026
- APEKS AP60 Vision GNSS Receiver Datasheet, 2026

