vendic wrote:Weird, I have two Garmin GPS's, one is a chart plotter on the boat and the other is a handheld I've how had for near a decade.
Never had issues with either.
I must admit I don't use Basecamp. I tried once and thought it was a pile of crap and just gave up.
I have downloaded other maps to the little gps but it's limited (no SD) and has an RS232 cable.
Works very well however and the battery life is incredible. I get over 24 hours on two AA cells.
Thumper wrote:I like paper maps.
Thumper wrote:I like paper maps.
vendic wrote:You can't get lost on the Ocean. The Sun rises in the West, sets in the North and is red at sunset.
Or something like that.
Since I don't know what that means, I'm not that worried about it.SciFi Chick wrote:Thumper wrote:I like paper maps.
You can't go geocaching with a paper map.
Thumper wrote:Since I don't know what that means, I'm not that worried about it.SciFi Chick wrote:Thumper wrote:I like paper maps.
You can't go geocaching with a paper map.
People navigated all over the planet, and he||, to the Moon and back without GPS forever. But of course I would never consider you or anyone else making a long boat journey without GPS, emergency radios, sat phones and what not. That would be silly these days. I just know that it can be done.
Regarding paper maps, I just like spreading them out and tracing from place to place. The scale stays the same, you can visualize the distances between points and understand the scale. On a screen, you have to zoom in to see detail or read, then you lose concept of scale. Zooming out to see the entire route and you lose detail. I guess I mean, I do. Also, I can't stand "text only" directions. It seems like you make one wrong turn and none of the roads or waypoints match up to the words on your directions. I need to see the route, see the alternatives, so I can also get myself out of trouble if we make a wrong turn or get lost.
Thumper wrote:Since I don't know what that means, I'm not that worried about it.SciFi Chick wrote:Thumper wrote:I like paper maps.
You can't go geocaching with a paper map.
Rommie wrote:Thumper wrote:Since I don't know what that means, I'm not that worried about it.SciFi Chick wrote:Thumper wrote:I like paper maps.
You can't go geocaching with a paper map.
Geocaching is a game where basically people hide little boxes (caches) and put the GPS coordinates on the Internet. Then other people go with those coordinates to find the caches. It's really fun and one of my main hobbies! (There's a smartphone app, and I guarantee if you download it you'd be surprised at how nearby the nearest cache is to you right now.)
Re: caching with a paper map, frankly by this point I can often go to the general area of the geocache and find it without serious issue. There's really only so many places you can hide an ammo can in the woods.
Thumper wrote:Usually when I'm driving in a grove of trees, something has gone wrong.
geonuc wrote:The good news is that I bought one from REI and they have an awesome return policy. The other two, as well as the GPS device itself, I'll just have chalk up to a life lesson.
Since I don't know what "download a smartphone app" means, I'm not to worried about it.Rommie wrote:(There's a smartphone app, and I guarantee if you download it you'd be surprised at how nearby the nearest cache is to you right now.)
Thumper wrote:Since I don't know what "download a smartphone app" means, I'm not to worried about it.Rommie wrote:(There's a smartphone app, and I guarantee if you download it you'd be surprised at how nearby the nearest cache is to you right now.)
We used to play a game like that pre gps, pre cell phone. It was more the treasure map kind of thing but written in riddles.
geonuc wrote:Well, Garmin sent me an email offering to replace all three 'bad' cards (I don't think they're bad) as long as it was within the one year warranty period. But after I sent the requested purchase info showing <1 year, they reneged and said they could only offer to sell me the three cards (or similar ones) at a discounted price, the same as I paid for the originals.
Yeah, so you aren't honoring your warranty and you expect me to buy the same cards again even though you've provided no compelling reason for the cards being the problem instead of the device. So I'll be out another couple hundred dollars and possibly have six map cards that won't work instead of three? No.
The good news is that I bought one from REI and they have an awesome return policy. The other two, as well as the GPS device itself, I'll just have chalk up to a life lesson.
Funny you say that. I haven't been an Amazon reviewer even though I spend a lot of money there, but just this week I decided to post a few reviews. I don't think the Oregon 450 is made anymore.SciFi Chick wrote:If I was you, I'd see if Amazon sells your particular brand of GPS, and go do a warning review for people...
geonuc wrote:I don't think the Oregon 450 is made anymore.
SciFi Chick wrote:geonuc wrote:I don't think the Oregon 450 is made anymore.
Gee, I wonder why. And that's probably why you aren't getting decent support. I hate when companies do that.
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