AnswerID: 230994 Submitted: Sunday, Apr 01, 2007 at 13:54
MEMBER - Darian (SA)
replied:
Your indicated use for
GPS units seems a bit like mine - want to know where you are if the chips are down - otherwise its very much an optional/recreational plaything.
I bought a Garmin
GPS 60 from www.gpsoz.com.au - about $325 delivered I think - extra $ got me an external antenna for the car and a cradle and 12V charger - its very good for carrying around in the field too. 2 x AA batteries will run it for ages.
While not a mapping model, it does have extra features that can be employed, such as making routes and recording tracks made etc, plus hoards of waypoints.
Re the various views, you can employ about 18 datat fleds (types of info to see - speed, eta, odometer, glide ration, elevation etc etc etc). The proverbial "motorcycle ashtray" is there to, in the form of a games section !!!
There is a cable and software in the kit, for interfacing it with a PC.
Overall, a simple unit that makes it easy to mark a location and get the coords.
Far as I know, worthwhile mapping units (that you can load maps into as they are developed) start at about twice these dollars and the maps cost $ of course.
Hell - what's wrong with paper maps ? and ....... all the handbooks are full of warnings that anyone who relies on a
GPS unit as the primary source of
navigation is a real mug (or words to that effect :-0)
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| By the time I'm too old to go bush, I'll have all my gear set up just right ! |
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