+CacheCreatures Posted November 18, 2005 Share Posted November 18, 2005 I'm starting to feel cranky about this whole thing. I've been looking, for years now, for a complete solution. Something that does true autorouting (with support for cross country type of route calculation), allows for truly paperless caching, can take a beating out there, has good battery life... Why is this so hard in the modern world to come up with? I've been using my pocket pc phone via a bluetooth GPS with ok results, but the ruggedness and battery life are just scary to rely on too much. I recently bought an eXplorist 600 with DirectRoute, and am really underwhelmed. Cost isn't a concern... someone please be my hero and point me to "the perfect GPS!" Ok rant over. I feel a bit better now. Quote Link to comment
+Miragee Posted November 18, 2005 Share Posted November 18, 2005 Well, I really like my eTrex Vista C. I like the small size to carry on hikes but it also auto-routes me very well when I get into town. I have an inexpensive Palm M500 with a hard case. It has 1000 caches in it that I can search for depending on which direction I go. Having everything combined in one unit might be convenient, but the cost, for me and many other Geocachers, would probably be prohibitive. Quote Link to comment
+Sputnik 57 Posted November 18, 2005 Share Posted November 18, 2005 Something that does true autorouting (with support for cross country type of route calculation), allows for truly paperless caching, can take a beating out there, has good battery life... No such critter yet. The closest is probably the Garmin 76C or 76CS. The ample memory and good autorouting of Garmin maps takes care of your first requirement. The unit is about as rugged as a portable electronic device can be. Sadly, "Geocaching Mode" is a rather poorly implemented approach to enable true paperless caching. The inexcusable 30 character limit in the description field makes it too small for hints or cache page descriptions, let alone the contents of prior logs. Until they come up with more on-board memory (or an SD card) to enable users to add additional data, you'll need to add a PDA and CacheMate to your arsenal. As a small consolation, PDAs with enough functionality for CacheMate are cheap. Quote Link to comment
+CacheCreatures Posted November 18, 2005 Author Share Posted November 18, 2005 (edited) ...you'll need to add a PDA and CacheMate to your arsenal... Exactly what I'm using now (PPC and GPXSonar actually). For autorouting and cache finding I use Mapopolis with a bluetooth GPS. Overall this solution works pretty well. Its just the battery life stinks (maybe 3 hours) and forget it if it were to slip outta my hand. Edited November 18, 2005 by CacheCreatures Quote Link to comment
+Miragee Posted November 18, 2005 Share Posted November 18, 2005 I know you want both things combined, but my Vista C lasts on one set of rechargeable batteries for more than 12 hours. And, of course I always have at least four fresh batteries with me. In almost four years, only one time, when I got snowed in up in Idaho, has the battery on my Palm run down . . . Quote Link to comment
+jacques0 Posted November 18, 2005 Share Posted November 18, 2005 This is absolutely a NON-answer to your question, but I can't help but think, at moments like this, of Lewis & Clark. Look at the contrast between the OP's request and what they had back then. These are amazing times, aren't they? Quote Link to comment
+RumJungle Posted November 18, 2005 Share Posted November 18, 2005 You could use this ruggedized unit: TDS Recon With Mapopolis software for vehicle navigation - turn by turn. For geocaching - to hunt the cache and manage its data, you could use BeeLineGPS. Quote Link to comment
+Hynr Posted November 19, 2005 Share Posted November 19, 2005 The closest thing that I found as the solution to the original inquiry is the Garmin iQue 3600. It is a Palm PDA with the GPS, maps, and autorouting voice navigation integrated. With Cachemate installed it does all the things mentioned. BUT it does NOT meet this part: "can take a beating out there, has good battery life... ". Battery life sucks - less than 1 hour with the GPS antenna in use. It is definitely NOT rugged (I have the bills to prove it). If it slips out of your hand, it will probably not survive without serious damage. If they could combine the GPSmap60 body with the iQue software and SD card, I would probably buy it. Quote Link to comment
+GOT GPS? Posted November 19, 2005 Share Posted November 19, 2005 This would be a good setup: GPS Legend C with up to 36 hour battery life Quest 2 GPS with full Preloaded NA Autorouting Maps Palm m130 PDA with paid version of CacheMate - Can find cheap. The loading of *.GPX Email downloads directly into Mapsource and Cachemate. This would be a good setup. I have only part of this setup because I have the 60C and not the Legend C, also I don't have a Quest 2 GPS yet, but the other things I do have already. Quote Link to comment
orphanbob Posted December 3, 2005 Share Posted December 3, 2005 I use the Garmin M5 and it work perfect for me (navigation and geocaching). Perhaps adding a protective cover can fix one of your issues. http://www.otterbox.com/ I have no issues with my battery life. Never have I had to manage it (turn it off while walking, etc). How new is the battery/unit? Quote Link to comment
+Airmapper Posted December 3, 2005 Share Posted December 3, 2005 (edited) Trimble GPS Dream my frend, dream... Edited December 3, 2005 by Airmapper Quote Link to comment
rynd Posted December 3, 2005 Share Posted December 3, 2005 Trimble GPS Dream my frend, dream... Our local Emergency Management Office has this or a similar unit. I've never used it but I have held it and it's kinda big and heavy. Of course I'd take it if they gave it to me. Quote Link to comment
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