You can do it in a lab, but the possibility of doing it, without intention, in the field in reasonable GPS conditions is, in my opinion, not a part of this discussion.
> The way ambiguity fixing works, and the way it has to run through thousands of candidate resolutions, that would be statistically so unlikely as to bordre on near impossible. Not impossible, but remember, there are multiple epochs analyzed for each stored "shot". So one shot is really a group of shots ,so you''d ahve to get the same bad shot 6, 8 , 10, 120, 240 etc or more times depending on how you did it.
Kent
No, the thrust of what I'm saying is that the math problem is pigeon holed and doesn't reflect the total, and while I can't express the total in mathematical terms, I can qualify it with experience.
As I said earlier, your math is spot on, and I agree with the answers you're getting.