+ThePropers Posted November 21, 2006 Share Posted November 21, 2006 Ok, I'm an idiot and just spent 1/2 hour wondering why when I loaded my pocket query (for the other side of the state), none of them were showing up under waypoints. Apparently there is some kindof "drop off" distance for the nearest caches, which of course is my default setup, so it was just showing "none found" when I pulled up my waypoints. I mistakenly thought the transfer suddenly wasn't working....even the Menu->Select symbol wouldn't show any. I finally figured out that if I went to "find by name" they'd show up. I almost panicked there thinking I broke something right before my 12 day Thanksgiving vacation but they're in the unit...just not showing up in my list of caches unless I find them by name. Anyone know what the distance is before caches just don't show up in the "nearest" caches? My guess is 100 miles... Quote Link to comment
+flash packers Posted November 22, 2006 Share Posted November 22, 2006 Ok, I'm an idiot and just spent 1/2 hour wondering why when I loaded my pocket query (for the other side of the state), none of them were showing up under waypoints. Apparently there is some kindof "drop off" distance for the nearest caches, which of course is my default setup, so it was just showing "none found" when I pulled up my waypoints. I mistakenly thought the transfer suddenly wasn't working....even the Menu->Select symbol wouldn't show any. I finally figured out that if I went to "find by name" they'd show up. I almost panicked there thinking I broke something right before my 12 day Thanksgiving vacation but they're in the unit...just not showing up in my list of caches unless I find them by name. Anyone know what the distance is before caches just don't show up in the "nearest" caches? My guess is 100 miles... I believe it's not mileage dependent but instead it will show the first 50 nearest to your base point. When you use find by name you would see all your waypoints up to 1000 max. Quote Link to comment
+ThePropers Posted November 22, 2006 Author Share Posted November 22, 2006 (edited) I believe it's not mileage dependent but instead it will show the first 50 nearest to your base point. When you use find by name you would see all your waypoints up to 1000 max. Nope, there's definitely a cutoff somewhere, since my Nearest list says "None Found" even though there is 1000 waypoints in there. Like I said, they show up if I do a find-by-name, but not nearest. If I change the reference point to somewhere closer to the group of caches it does work though. According to GSAK, the closest cache in the .gpx file I loaded is 121.49 miles away from where I'm at now, so I'm guessing the cutoff is at 99.99 miles. Just a guess though. Edited November 22, 2006 by ThePropers Quote Link to comment
+media601 Posted November 22, 2006 Share Posted November 22, 2006 Nope, there's definitely a cutoff somewhere, since my Nearest list says "None Found" even though there is 1000 waypoints in there. Like I said, they show up if I do a find-by-name, but not nearest. I don't know what the exact distance is, but once when I returned to Minneapolis from Nevada I loaded my local PQ. After the transfer the unit showed no geocaches! I did a complete hard reset before I realized the unit still thought it was in Nevada--I hadn't powered it up outdoors since my return. So, while I can't answer your question exactly, at least you can be glad you weren't me--trudging through every icon in Setup trying to reconfigure the unit. Quote Link to comment
+Fan4 Posted November 22, 2006 Share Posted November 22, 2006 I travel a fair amount, and when I load points in another area, I just look at the map page (scroll until I see the boxes, then drill-down to make sure it's exactly where I want) to make sure they took. Quote Link to comment
robertlipe Posted November 22, 2006 Share Posted November 22, 2006 In fairness, this feature of this family is described in the FAQ that's nailed at the top of this forum. But it still catches a lot of folks by suprise. The author of that FAQ put some additional information at: http://forums.Groundspeak.com/GC/index.php...howtopic=140940 I don't think any of us recognized the magic of the number "116 miles". Quote Link to comment
+Timpat Posted November 22, 2006 Share Posted November 22, 2006 We had discussed this also in THIS thread. The conclusions are toward the bottom, but it seems to be based on 100 minutes of arc, which equals 100 nautical miles, and that equals about 115 miles! Quote Link to comment
+ThePropers Posted November 22, 2006 Author Share Posted November 22, 2006 Thanks for the links Timpat and robertlipe (honestly I did try a search but didn't find those). I was about to run some experiments of my own to find the magic distance, so that saved me some work. Boo-yah! Quote Link to comment
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