As more than a few would have noticed I have a love hate relationship with Garmin. Some would say that I love to hate them or would hate to love them but in many ways Garmin has the ability to hit what I am after rather well. For the record I have a 305 Edge (two, actually three but one failed) bike computer, Fenix 405 wrist watch, Garmin 62S, and an Extrex 10 that I gave to my brother. All have had there issues which tends to revolve more around the software than the hardware.
So into the fold was welcomed a Rino 650. It came as a twin pack with the AA battery holders optioned on. Why two? Well having been laid up with and Achilles operation to pass the time I took up a water activity, and it made sense to have two way communication with a friend, so rather than buy one each the two for $649 was too tempting. Having had experienced Garmin's mapping products I avoided the option to pay a small fortune for arguably near useless maps for off road activities. As more than a few would have noticed I have fallen for the charms for OSM, and while a lot of work is required to get them up to commercial map standards they are good enough for my purposes, providing I while away a few hours putting in geographical points of interest. The main points are lakes and the occasional mountain as frankly this combined with Contour Australia 5m gives enough reference points to be useful in the real world.
So out of the box one came and the assembly took place. Can not complain about the manual as there was not one! Ok, yes there is an electronic copy on the device but you will need a PC to access it. There in is the first lesson. To get the most out of Garmin's GPS a PC is required. There is a quick start-up guide but it is rather light on. But being a male reading a manual is a last resort anyway so in I dived. The first step was cooling my heels for about three hours as it charged up. Can not over emphasis that getting a long life from battery packs is the proper care of it. One of the first things is to fully charge a battery before first use. This gave me a chance to figure out the AA battery pack. Aging eyesight and grey on grey plus my dislike of forcing things meant this took a while but then success. Like the unit itself it is well made with typical Garmin industrial grade construction. While no great fan of Garmin's consumer goods such as the Edge 305 construction I can not fault their outdoor ranges' construction.
Ok charged up and ready to use. The unit is both a GPS and UHF 5w two-way. Just be aware that when using the AA battery pack the power output is reduced to 2.5 watts. This means it is a pretty serious UHF two-way. The unit is waterproofed to IPX7 standards which is ideal for bushwalking but probably a little underdone for marine use but then my Garmin 62s has survived more than a few dunkings so though not rated for swimming with it might just handle this, but user beware as the JIS8 rating or better is recommended (Uniden VHF marine two-ways that float) for that treatment.
So testing time. Well not much was done today. It received ok and managed to trigger a repeater but not having another person around it was more basic look and feel. The screen is touch screen. What this means that the Garmin 62S button dance is not required so it actually works well. Honestly the Garmin 62s button arrangement was designed by a demented sadist and I have no respect for any claims that this is a good thing as it forces the user to have sufficient standard of mental
Ok, step one was getting Contours Australia 5 metres on it. Oh no!!!! Now a vEnting session! Mapinstall on my PC locked when I connected it. Tried the 62s and the same effect. Decided to ring Garmin support. Ten minutes of lift music and no wonder a tech at the receiving end has a consumer about on the edge of an axe wielding attack. Usual Garmin approach. Uninstall everything and try again. Sorry, this little black duck had already uninstalled and re-installed it. Next time waster was a request/demand to uninstall Garmin maps. Hostility was rising but then Mapinstall returned an error screen which was dully emailed to support. Same old same old blame a non Garmin product, that been Shonkymaps. Time to end the call and retreat with the service complaint number. Uninstalled Shonkymaps and still the same issue. Given that Garmin can not be responsible for third party maps I stared to uninstall from the PC the other non-Garmin maps. I honestly can say my mood was dark as I thought that this a waste of time as I had no problems before Garmin, with usual programmer arrogance, had automatically updated the original version of Mapinstaller that had worked. After much nashing I noticed OZ-Topo trial had been installed. I had installed it sometime back to answer a fellow site user's question on what did I think of it. Well, let me say, not much!!!! It been a trail version was copyright protected and this meant it crashed Mapinstaller when a device was installed. With it removed all was well with the world. Once again I make my point that commercial software that has the overinflated sense of importance to impose copy protection has no place in the world. As for Oz-Topo crashing Garmin's map installer this shows the contempt that they show to their potential
Now rant is over time to push one so Shonkymaps was reloaded onto the PC and it along with Contours Australia 5M put on the Rino 650 plus the latest downloads of OSM. Time to go to bed as I am sure that if I leave it to the morning all will work well but if use tonight the god of the gremlins will reek havoc on my sleep.
Cheers