+embra Posted December 23, 2008 Share Posted December 23, 2008 I've found myself cutting imagery with the same scheme, Klem. It is nice--plus, if you want to just turn the imagery off (sometimes the clean display of the TopoUSA data is preferred), the imagery can be easily toggled on or off. Quote Link to comment
+Team CowboyPapa Posted December 23, 2008 Share Posted December 23, 2008 (edited) That's because, IMHO, Sat 10 imagery looks best at Zoom Levels 10 - 11, USGS 3DTQs at 12 - 13, and Color Aerials at 14-16. And might I add that for Sat 10 and Color aerial, one can select "Hybrid Maps" such that Topo 7 contours and roads are overlayered on the imagery. Outside of that, what is lacking is........... Edited December 23, 2008 by Team CowboyPapa Quote Link to comment
Moun10Bike Posted December 23, 2008 Share Posted December 23, 2008 To the extent Garmin maps are customizable, its via the backdoor, cgpsmapper, not Garmin. Even then its limited to transparent overlays, which only work for points and lines. A transparent polygon is nonsensical. You can create both transparent and non-transparent maps in Garmin. You can also have a transparent polygon layer. I have created such a mapset that displays building footprints. In that case, the polygons are not transparent, but the spaces between them are. It's true that the tools for creating Garmin maps come from third-party sources, but I have found them to be much more customizable and flexible than DeLorme's tools (speaking here of Topo 7). Quote Link to comment
SiliconFiend Posted December 23, 2008 Share Posted December 23, 2008 To the extent Garmin maps are customizable, its via the backdoor, cgpsmapper, not Garmin. Even then its limited to transparent overlays, which only work for points and lines. A transparent polygon is nonsensical. You can create both transparent and non-transparent maps in Garmin. You can also have a transparent polygon layer. I have created such a mapset that displays building footprints. In that case, the polygons are not transparent, but the spaces between them are. It's true that the tools for creating Garmin maps come from third-party sources, but I have found them to be much more customizable and flexible than DeLorme's tools (speaking here of Topo 7). And you can actually make sort-of transparent polygons for Garmin, too. If you use a transparent map, then use a custom TYP file, you can make polygons which are only partially filled (according the the pattern you design), so you can see what's underneath. I did this when I layered a customized version of Topo 3.0 on top of City Nav NT 2009 because the polygons for park areas were not identical and I wanted to see the polygons from Topo 3.0 without completely obscuring the City Nav roads underneath. Quote Link to comment
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