Battery Life: 16-50 hours (GPS Mode); 3 weeks (sensor mode); 6 weeks (watch mode)
Ent wrote:Hi
Well it finally arrived, my new Garmin Fenix watch/GPS. Unpacked and charging. First impression. Very thick. Hope it is easy to setup as it is going walking on Wednesday for a week largely off track. Anyway, hope it is a much better option than the rather useless Suunto Core that I have.
Cheers
photohiker wrote:How are you going to recharge it?Battery Life: 16-50 hours (GPS Mode); 3 weeks (sensor mode); 6 weeks (watch mode)
flatfoot wrote: I'm interested in taking one of these to Nepal. I understand you can adjust the resolution of the track logs to conserve battery life. How fine-grained is the control of the recording interval. Is this a value in minutes or seconds? I was hoping that it could be set to 5 or 10 minute intervals.
One returning from the trip, my intent is to load track logs and photos into a photo program (Aperture on Mac) to add the geotag data to the photos.
It will be interesting to see the maximum number of days of runtime you can achieve.
flatfoot wrote:Thanks for the updates. Watching (pun intended) with interest.
Ent wrote:I will still take my Garmin 62s along and more than happy to play second fiddle to the groups much superior navigator and his preferred toy of choice the Asus Nexus.
dancier wrote:Ent wrote:I will still take my Garmin 62s along and more than happy to play second fiddle to the groups much superior navigator and his preferred toy of choice the Asus Nexus.
Rumour has it on the Whirlpool forums that next week Google are announcing the release of the 32 gigabyte 3G Nexus, hope it’s true because I want one for overseas travel.
I’ve been hanging tight to see what Apple have up their sleeves but even so they will have to come up with something really good to beat the Nexus’s dedicated GPS and Google mapping.
sthughes wrote:... that fits on your wrist (as long as you don't have a small wrist!).
Ent wrote:Been absence for about a week due to a long planned and anticipated wander from the Walls to Lake St Clair starting using the Moses Creek Track then the Lake Artemis Track then following your nose to Mount Spurling and then onto Mount Ida and finally to Narcissus Hut. Experienced every season with heavy snows on top of the Traveller Range so with Mount Ida being a wash out we used the extra day to split a leg that with the heavy snow turned out to be the correct decision. Great trip and one to enjoy the best and worst of Tassie conditions to evaluate gear.
In true Strollers style we were heavily over prepared. On the emergency side a Spot and PLB. For navigation, paper maps (two sets), Asus Nexus, two iPhones, Garmin 62s, and the Fenix plus a person that has been in the area before. The Nexus was running multiple mapping programs plus Bing satellite photographs. It proved to be the mainstay of the navigation largely in part to the owner being a navigation wiz. But in true Murphy style decided to change language into SpanishIts owner threaten it with immediate ebay sale but finally learned enough Spanish to get it to comprehend English again. Sufficient to say that the weather conditions were hard on gear so good chance to see what would stand up to the conditions.
My contribution was the Garmin 62s, Fenix and iPhone in Lifeproof case. The iPhone in a Lifeproof case withstood the conditions well but the Garmins being worn outside the clothing copped the more extreme conditions and sailed through. Just to test me out sthughes at the end of the trip presented me with a map and compass to fix our position. Ok we were sunning ourselves on the ferry platform at Narcissus with crystal clear blue skies but I must admit I struggled to remember the basics, such has been the inroads that technology has made.
But to the Fenix. In answer to the question on datum, it can display all the common datum so you can use it as a basic GPS. In fact, that is actually its main intended purpose with track back being its next main role. In those roles it performs extremely well and is all you could ask for. The interface is logical and the button sequences well thought out. Now some might be familiar with my almost loathing of Garmin's interfaces so this is indeed high praise. Its buttons kill the Suunto for feel and ability to use with mitts. I like the look and feel of the unit and even without the GPS feature makes a Suunto Core very second rate.
I must admit that I have lost faith in electronic compasses so did not have much tolerance in trusting them. But if you allow the Fenix time to settle on your wrist it makes the Garmin 62s compass look very second rate and leaves for dead the dangerously useless Suunto compass. You can use it to navigate to waypoints![]()
I brought the remote temperature sensor and that worked a treat. Honestly a watch based temperature sensor is near useless but with the remote sensor you can be in your tent and check outside or be walking along and have an actuate reading. This is useful for actually understanding the true temperature. It can snow like mad and still be above zero for most of the day is just one example of putting data behind emotive expectations.
We sent a waypoint from the the Garmin 62s to the Fenix with no problem so should be handy in sharing data in the field between Garmin devices.
Now for many the above features may appear useless but for people willing to think outside the square they can be very handy aspects to evaluating gear performance.
Now the real party piece is using OSM. Now the resolution of the screen means it is not even a contender to be a mapping GPS but it can be very handy in low visibility situations. Here is a screen shot of what you can see. Not badThe main advantage is using it as a track following tool. We have been gradually refining the Moses Creek Track in OSM by knocking out the false turns that you can make. The unit can enable you to check if you have not taken a wrong turn after say 10 metres or less. Brilliant in difficult conditions or following a poorly defined track that has been walked by someone before and entered into OSM. Now with Tasmap the Moses Creek Track is in the wrong place and more than a few water bodies are missed
So even the professional maps can be rather suspect so as usual caution is needed when relying on OSM tracks.
I ran the unit on full GPS tracking performance so battery life was not great. About eight hours of walking took it down from 100% to around 50%. The unit will switch off the GPS at around 5% so lets say 16 hours of GPS tracking will pull the unit up. Not bad given that the cold temperatures experienced made the Garmin 62s eat lithium batteries. I have yet to experiment with the ultra setting apart from finding it rather annoying when using the GPS as a track following tool.
I charged the unit using a mixture of battery packs. My clever idea of using a solar panel rechargeable pack came unstuck with the weather gods drowning my feeble attempts of using "green" energy. For a brief while it looked like a Jaycar 1000 mah battey pack with built in solar panel could just keep up with the unit but constant rain and snow on a few days made that concept a joke. A couple of 2000 mah battey packs would keep the unit in business for a week when used as a full tracking GPS.
To be frank, the unit is not going to replace a mapping GPS, nor even a dedicated GPS used in tracking mode but for those that occasionally use a GPS to fix or confirm a position on a map, like to know the elevation, and want the ability in bad weather to use waypoints the unit is more than up to the job. For gear freaks with an interest in OSM and track following it is great. Battery life is the issue but like with gas stoves I would imagine different people would get varying length of time from the unit by switching it on and off as needed.
For me the unit has kicked the Suunto Core into the garbage bin and will be a standard tool. I will still take my Garmin 62s along and more than happy to play second fiddle to the groups much superior navigator and his preferred toy of choice the Asus Nexus.
For many the unit will be derided as not being a grown up GPS with more than few continuing to shun GPS technology for various highly personal reasons but for some it will be a very useful tool and for other a great toy to indulge their gear freak passion with. I would much rather have it, than not have it, is my highly personal opinion.
Cheers
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