photohiker wrote:Maps. There are options other than buying or hacking Garmin's maps - a lot of areas I go to don't have good coverage anyway, so I use either the Openstreetmap or the Shonky mapping both along with Contours Australia contour mapping based on the SRTM (Space Shuttle) topo scanning done a few years ago. Works really well on the HCx and no reason to doubt it wouldn't work on the new series. There's a bit of a learning curve getting all this working, but worth the effort IMO.
Definitely sounds like a learning curve photohiker, but if its free then I am willing to have a go, especially if a lot of areas don't have good coverage anyway... what you recomend does sound confusing but I'm sure once I've had a fiddle I will be able to get my head around it. I've just read about custom maps too where you can transfer your own paper maps into the device using the supplied software, sounds grea if it isn't too tricky or time consuming. This is a bonus because I have a hefty collection of maps & a scanner
Mark F wrote:Garmin have a good name for their gps units but like most gps companies are way behind the technological frontiers when it comes to screens. When buying a GPS the first decision is do you want a mapping or non-mapping unit.
After having a couple of non-mapping units I'm going to get one that has maps this time but I'm also looking at price, size, weight, battery life and robustness (waterproof etc) of which the smart phones definitely dont tick many boxes. I'm not really keen on touchscreens or camera either, I have about $2.5k of camera gear that if I want to take photos (plus a water/shockproof compact) and the touch screen is just something else that can break in my opinion, not to mention suck the batteries and make for a larger heavier unit.
From what I can see GPS devices and smart phone GPS's aren't created equally either. Looks like GPS's work anywhere on the planet & phones don't and GPS devices are more accurate from what I can tell, phones arent waterproof, etc. I don't know how true any of this is though nor the difference between how the technology for the two works? does a phones gps rely on having reception?
Price wise, and I am taking all these off the garmin website, not the best deals that I can find, for a fair comparison, the montana is $800, way to much for me to spend, the oregon is $600-750, too much, the dakota $350-450, closer but still more than I want to spend (*cough* the company wants to spend). The etrex
10/20/30 are
$150/250/350 respectively but I can handle it if I can avoid the extra couple of hundred buying decent maps.
Weight and size wise the etrex is the smallest and lightest of these (very close to the dakota though) and it also has the best battery life by quite a margin, up to 10 hours longer than the oregon and montana and 5 hours more than the dakota...
Mark F wrote:I have used the foreTrex in thick forest and narrow gorges and it worked fine. Just a bit slower to pick up satellites
One of the reasons I'm keen on the etrex is because after a being up in the rainforest trying to find some waterfalls with a local bushwalking group the only device that could confirm that we were where we thought were (and we were, if that makes sense) was a guy with an old etrex h. It turned on and got a fix quickly and easily even though the canopy was dense, where 2 other units struggled to get a decent signal (dont know what they were, one was a larger fancy looking model with a colour screen)
photohiker wrote:Just to clarify. With the Etrex HCx, I get about a week out of 4 AA's and it is on for the whole walk day and logging the track. I turn it off for breaks longer than 10 minutes or so, and am careful to turn it off on reaching camp. If the HCx were used for fix only like you use the foretrex, it would probably last for months on a single pair of AA's. AAA's have way less power than AA's.
Thats really cool, months on a pair of AA's sounds like you should be in advertising photohiker

I always have a map & compass but I will use whatever new GPS that I get in a similar way, for logging the tracks sometimes (the first time I do a walk or paddle so I can put the track info into some kind of diary, the exact route, the distance, elevation change, speed etc etc and other times it will only be used to get a position fix if I'm uncertain (ha! never happen... much) AND to help with surveying and locating reference points for work related projects.
marangaroo86 wrote:I just got the Etrex 20... Sorry I can not give you more information , have not really had a good play yet...
Once you felt like you've given it a good test marangaroo I'd like to hear your thoughts, pros & cons and all that, cheers
ALWAYS be yourself.
Unless you can be outside, then ALWAYS be outside.