RAS: the almanac is a description of the satellites in the GPS constellation and has nothing to do with your location. If you're going to hike to the South Pole it would make no difference to let it download the almanac from your back yard.
Outdoordad: about 15 minutes to download an entire almanac, technically 30 seconds per satellite so it changes a little from time to time. This doesn't mean you're going to have to wait that long, but rather that you *might*. If the satellites you need info about are at the front of list it may only take a couple of minutes.
If your GPS is turned on when plugged into the car's cigarette lighter then it's downloading an almanac already. In your case the stored Almanac may never get stale and you may never see that long cold start delay – the delay you do see might be only a warm start, doing the 30-second-max ephemeris downloads for each visible satellite. I was thinking of a handheld GPS used only on vacations that might be off all winter, long enough to have the almanac go stale.
Frank2135: yes, that sounds like it's waiting on a fresh almanac. If it's used weekly all spring it shouldn't have that long wait any more since it's always refreshing the almanac when it's on, and it takes a couple of months for the last download to become stale.
Brangdon: yeah, but I wasn't that brave with the details.
I think the almanac is the only place to get drift and error rates, not to mention poisoning info, so an ephemeris-only fix may shift a little once that satellite's current almanac entry is available.
I didn't mean to blow this out of proportion. I was just thinking, once I get in the country on vacation why wait on almanac when turning it on ahead of time is painless? And if you want to avoid unnecessary battery consumption in the field, then do the almanac download ahead of time, before putting in fresh batteries. No big deal, it's going to work either way.