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Team Tired Boy

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Posts posted by Team Tired Boy

  1. If you also use a Palm with that computer this can cause headaches. You may need to go to the system tray (I think that's what the list of icons in the lower right hand corner of the screen is called) and exit the Hot Sync application there. Otherwise your computer might not be able to see the GPSr.

  2. My Legend keeps telling me that it's been disconnected from its power source and will shut itself off in 30 seconds unless I press a button to continue. It seems to think that it was plugged into a power outlet, was unplugged, and doesn't have batteries in it. It often doesn't actually shut itself off, but it's unusable because I can't get the pop-up message to go away.

     

    To my knowledge, I've never had this unit powered by anything other than batteries. I've had this problem crop up regardless of the type of battery I use. Turning the unit off and restarting it has no effect. I've tried cleaning the electrical contacts with no success. Taking the batteries out and replacing them has no effect.

     

    Any ideas?

  3. The most important quality for a geocaching PDA is that it be cheap. It's going to get dropped in ponds, sat on, rained on, dropped on rocks, left behind at caches, etc. Luckily, it doesn't take much to run cachemate. I bought a Palm IIIxe off eBay one year ago for $16. Works fine, and I don't worry about it.

  4. What color is it? If it's blue, it's a "regular" Legend. As for WAAS, I leave it turned off because I don't see any real difference in accuracy. Other people think there is a difference, so they leave it on.

  5. We have a yellow and a Legend, and I'd say the Legend is hands down the better value. You get mapping capability, the cable, and some better functions all for not much more money. I'd prefer the Legend even if it didn't have mapping capability.

  6. While geocaching in North Carolina, we came across Peach Arch (GCG7J2), which requires the assistance of someone in British Columbia who has done GCG7TA to swap coordinates to find our respective finals. Can anyone help us out?

  7. Don't know about Magellan's, but I once swam a quarter mile to a cache (yep, 1/2 mile round trip) with my yellow eTrex hung around my neck. It would lose its satellite lock in more than a foot or so of water, but it was turned on and working the entire time.

  8. I am sure security will not allow caches right in Olympic village... but nearby? any placed specifically for visitors to the Olympics i Italy?

     

    Don't know about that, but there are definitely some caches in Torino. I was there on business last year and DNF'd one.

  9. There is a place in my area I am considering for a cache, now on state land. Abandoned in 1919, it used to be a WWI training ground. All that remains is a few remenants of foundations and an old rusty, concrete mounted (75mm?) cannon. I'm eyeing the cannon. Would it be acceptable to make a PCV tube cache, paint it black for stealth, and put a loop on one end so it could be extracted only with a coat hangar/broomstick tool? Be gentle with me, under consideration would be only my second cache placement......

    That sounds pretty cool to me! If I had any doubts about the canon still be functional, though, I might not want to poke around in there. But a canon left from 1919 sounds good to me!

  10. You could create your own log using National Geographic adventure paper or you could use a Rite-in-the-Rain notebook. Both work great in the rain, but the NG paper is difficult to write on with a pencil. We use the GC.com branded Rite-in-the-Rain notebooks for our ammo boxes. These are availabe from the Groundspeak store. Note that the small GC.com notebook is not the waterproof paper. We've used NG paper for micros.

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