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Wesbo

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Posts posted by Wesbo

  1. While I'm sure it was quite an investment, your A100 is really just an imaging tool. Throw that strap around your neck and take it caching.

     

    I tote my Pentax K10D just about everywhere, and while it has had some thumps and has gotten a little wet, it keeps on ticking. With the kit zoom and/or a small 50mm lens your A100 should be pretty small and easy to haul. A little waistpack might help, plus you could stash other junk in there as well.

  2. Guns are typically a waste of space and extra weight.

    Bear bells and if you absolutely need it pepper spray.

    There is a recent study, that looks reasonable, that backs up your claim.

     

    Basically it shows that guns aren't useless against bears, but that sprays are more effective. So if bears are your only concern, it would seem that sprays are the way to go. Of course, there's nothing wrong with a two- or three-tier plan.

     

    W

  3. I have about 15 months experience with my 60 CSx and many other GPS's including the PN-20 and the 400T Oregon for about 3 weeks. I have 549 caches for with 116 FTF's, so I have some experience with Geocaching and multiple GPS's. I love the Oregon's touchscreen interface and the the feature set in general but unfortunately, that's were it ends. On 6 attempts to locate caches the most recent this afternoon, the Oregon hasn't done the job, period, I had to return to the 60CSx to find the cache. Today, the 60CSx indicated I was within 4 feet of the cache and the Oregon had it 108' away. This was the end for the Oregon I'm sorry to say. Aside from the accuracy issues, (I do have 2.3 loaded) the display is a challenge in bright sunlight but I would have tried to deal with that. But the basic function of a GPS is reasonable accuracy and I do not feel comfortable with the Oregon's accuracy at this point and that it can be improved via updates. For now, the 60CSx is my GPS of choice and the Oregon will be returned.

     

    I wonder if you had a dud OR. Mine doesn't seem to have any accuracy issues. I turned it off Friday at work, about 15 miles away. I just turned it on. Sitting at my kitchen table on the first floor of a two-story house it took about 30 seconds to tell me that 'home' (my kid's playset in the side yard) was 24 feet away. It's off by about six feet but it is still acquiring sats.

  4. Please list the GPSr in this format:

     

    GPSr name & model number

    antenna type

    screen size

    price

     

    Anything else you can think of

    Best for what? Geocaching? Boating? Getting to and from the mall? You can get a used etrex for a song on ebay and you can get a Trimble surveying setup with sub-centimeter accuracy for the price of a pretty nice car.

     

    Need some specifics...

  5. For a while now I have been dealing with cheapo chargers that overheated batteries and/or otherwise shortened their little battery lives and never really charged them well.

     

    I ordered a LaCrosse BC-900 and have been using it lately. It has four separate charging circuits so each battery's charge is monitored from start to finish. It brought some of my old batteries back to life and has made me a believer in rechargeables once again.

     

    No, I don't have any connection with LaCrosse or anything like that. It's just nice to see something actually work really, really well.

  6. I want to see 3 different tracks (blue, red, black) on the map at the same time.

     

    how to do so? :ph34r:

     

    First make sure you have Software version 2.2

     

    Assuming you have three tracks already loaded do the following to each one

     

    - Main Menu>Track Manager

    - Select a track

    - Select "Show on Map"

    - Select "Set Color" and select the color you want to use

    - Repeat

     

    GO$Rs

    This procedure works on mine, but I'm not able to get a screenshot at the moment.

  7. I would like to ask this again from Oregon users:

     

    What procedure do you follow when going after a cache? Do you use the "GeoCaching" profile or the "Automotive" profile?

     

    If you use the "GeoCaching" profile, if you navigate to the cache and have Nav maps installed, once you get to the cache, do you switch to "Recalculate Offroad" or do you use the "Compass" screen?

     

    Just trying to figure out what works best for other people...

    I get mixed results sometimes.

     

    Thanks for your replies!

     

    Jim

     

    I use neither profile. Mine is in Recreational profile all the time. I just use the Geocaching mode to find a geocache, and then use the map and compass screen to get there.

  8. Forgive me for suggesting that Geocaching has gotten certain folks into the outdoors who might have not done so without the 'gadget' factor. Give an outdoor newbie a sport with an attainment/achievement factor and you'll get the odd bird who doesn't know how to act outside. Let me quote:

     

    "The best thing about geocaching is that everyone can play"

    "The worst thing about geocaching is that everyone can play"

  9. THANK YOU ALL SO MUCH!!!!

     

    You have graciously given (which i shamelessly solicited!!) advice to an utter GPS N-E-W-B - offered thought-provoking questions and provided helpful comparisons. Thank you.

     

    I owe you all a debt of gratitude for helping select a device that will help me accomplish what i hope to do - take urban kids into the mountains (and back!) and introduce them to the joy of the outdoors through teaching them to use compasses (i will use the 60CSx to set navigation courses/points as waypoints).

     

    I have settled on the Garmin 60SCx and though spendy, i believe in making solid, long-term quality investments. I bought the GPS device, a DC (car) power adapter, protective case, and City Navigator-Europe (though American i, and my family, usually live in Bosnia), and a SanDisk 2GB MicroSD card. I already have a dozen or so rechargeable AA batteries..... :D

     

    frank

     

    Frank:

     

    Invest $40 or so in a good Maha (or comparable) charger to keep those rechargeables healthy and you're on your way...

  10. :lol: Went out for my first hunt today with my new 60CSx. Went out for two (2) caches. GPSr alarmed as being on site, both times, but for the life of me I could not find the cache. Spent about 45-min at each site, DNY :rolleyes: OH! and yes I did use the HINT both times.

     

    Ever happen to you!

     

    Might just be me, Bill, but I think it's helpful to everybody if you log a DNF on those... It lets other seekers know that the cache might be a little/a lot challenging, and it lets the owner know if a hint needs tweaking and/or if the location needs to be double-checked... JMO.

  11. :lol: Went out for my first hunt today with my new 60CSx. Went out for two (2) caches. GPSr alarmed as being on site, both times, but for the life of me I could not find the cache. Spent about 45-min at each site, DNY :rolleyes: OH! and yes I did use the HINT both times.

     

    Ever happen to you!

     

    All the time...

  12. I wear a large stainless steel watch with a stainless steel band on my left wrist, so I don’t want my left hand anywhere close to my receiver when I’m calibrating or using the magnetic compass. It’s pretty close to impossible to spin the unit smoothly with the fingers of just one hand and keep it level, so I hold it at arms length and turn myself. I suppose I could remove my watch while calibrating; but I don’t see that as much better. Well, maybe when people are watching… :D

     

    The stainless alloys typically used in watchbands/cases are non-magnetic. Actually, the vast majority of stainless alloys are non-magnetic, and those stainless alloys that are magnetic are just barely magnetic.

  13. I noticed a few quirks today with my Oregon 400t:

    1st, while in "GeoCaching" profile, when navigating to a cache, then switching to "off road", the arrow doesn't move AND the "Feet to Destination" shows "0" and never updates!

    If I switch to "Automotive" profile and tell it to go to "offroad" it works FINE!

     

    2nd, I was at another cache and switched to "off road" mode and the unit just shut off!

    I started it back up again and tried it again with the same results. This happened 3 or 4 times!

     

    3rd, I was in a client's office, in the basement with NO windows or doors (except the one that goes back upstairs!) and I turned my Oregon on and fot FULL SATELITES! And I KNOW it was for the right area because when it was on last, it was approx. 45 miles away! When the satelites locked on, it showed that I was in the right place! How'd it get satelite lock without ANY windows or openings to the sky???

    :D

    The Geocaching profile functionality seems a little buggy. After logging a find and choosing 'find next Geocache' (or whatever the menu item is called) I just get a blank screen. Perhaps the QA guys weren't cachers.

  14. Keep in mind that your average GPSr is weatherproof, rugged, can take some bumps, and so on. Your average PDA/GPS, or some other solution, isn't. I don't mind handing my GPSr to somebody and letting them carry it around. And since it is a single-purpose device I don't have any critical data on it that I can't live without.

     

    Ever been after a cache in the rain? In a canoe? That pretty much rules out anything but a purpose-built GPSr for me...

  15. Accuracy is important to me, i'd like to know i'm within 2-3 feet of it if that's possible

    Accuracy on a civilian GPS can be less than 3m (about 10ft) with WAAS turned on but it can never be said to be accurate to less than 1m (about 3ft). Its just the nature of the civilian signal of the GPS system. The military system is purported to be more accurate than that but civilians cannot access it.

    This information is somewhat out of date. The military no longer intentionally degrades the accuracy available to civilian units. The use of this feature, called "selective availabilty," was discontinued in May 2000. In September, 2007 the government announced its intention to remove selective availability entirely.

     

    However, in order get the kind of accuracy you want, you would need to purchase a professional surveying unit rather than a recreational handheld. These units cost thousands, not hundreds, of dollars.

     

    ...but this kind of accuracy is kind of meaningless in Geocaching unless hiders and cachers all have units with this kind of accuracy. If the hider's GPS is 50' off, and your GPS is accurate to withing inches, you're still 50' from the cache... The vast majority of units made in the last 5-10 years have more than enough accuracy for geocaching. Any current unit from the big manufacturers is accurate enough.

  16. Broadway Photo (and many of the other NY-based electronics companies) has been ripping people off for decades. They are crooks. Look around enough and you'll find that they love to create sockpuppet accounts on forums like this one from 'satisfied customers'. Generally it's a newbie with a day-old account with a grand total of one post...

     

    Seriously, stay away from these guys.

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