OK thanks, I just learned something useful.
This dovetails in with what I call “minimal pos” which is a stripped down quick and easy way to save and open known reference coordinates with Emlid Studio. For example, opening published coordinates of a survey mark as Layer 2 after processing to compare test results.
You can quickly create a minimal pos in a text editor like Notepad, simply start with two leading zeros to represent the expected Date & Time, then followed by your Lat and Lon with anything up to 9 decimal places and Height in meters up to 4 decimal places. All fields separated by a space, and a new line (CR/Enter) at the end, and then save it as .pos. That’s it.
The minimum format looks like this:
0 0 DD.DDDDDDDDD DD.DDDDDDDDD MM.MMMM
CR
Here’s an example for an iconic Australian Landmark:
Example minimal .pos file (41 Bytes)