+Johnal Posted May 26, 2009 Share Posted May 26, 2009 I looked at a 400 and a 550 side by side at the garmin booth in GeoWoodstock. It was an overcast day. The screens looked identical in resolution and readability. I wish I had run them up to max brightness to see if there was a difference. Quote Link to comment
yogazoo Posted June 11, 2009 Share Posted June 11, 2009 Does anyone know what chipset is being used in the 550-550t's? Cartesio? MTK? Here's to hoping it contains one of the new MTK chips designed for low speed accuracy (this seems to be the achylles heel of the Cartesio). Quote Link to comment
+g-o-cashers Posted June 11, 2009 Share Posted June 11, 2009 I looked at a 400 and a 550 side by side at the garmin booth in GeoWoodstock. It was an overcast day. The screens looked identical in resolution and readability. I wish I had run them up to max brightness to see if there was a difference. I've talked to several other people who saw the one at GW and they didn't think that there was much difference at all between the current 300/400 and the 550 on display. Does anyone know what chipset is being used in the 550-550t's? Cartesio? MTK? Here's to hoping it contains one of the new MTK chips designed for low speed accuracy (this seems to be the achylles heel of the Cartesio). I'm hoping for this too, but incorporating a new chipset and associated software changes into the Oregon would probably be a big deal. Like others, I'm suspecting we'll see the new MTK3329 chipset on the Dakota. It would be difficult for Garmin if the lower end unit had better reception than the Oregon. Quote Link to comment
Grasscatcher Posted June 11, 2009 Share Posted June 11, 2009 Would it necessarily be a Plus if they put the MTK chipset in the Oregon? The H series E Trex's have MTK in them and hasn't that been determined to be the source of "drift" problem? Quote Link to comment
yogazoo Posted June 11, 2009 Share Posted June 11, 2009 (edited) From my understanding there is a new chipset from MTK specifically designed for low speed accuracy as is needed in handheld devices. Thread I'll now refrain from ordering a 550 until I know what chip is going into what units. If the Dakota has the MTK, despite being a "lesser" model, I'll go for it instead. I'd rather have reliable and steady accuracy than another digital camera. I haven't exactly been blown away with the Oregons operation at slow speeds. They (Garmin) either average the bejezus out of the tracklog (earlier software) or the track looks convulsive (latest few versions). Either way the problem seems indicative of the lousy low speed specs on the Cartesio. It's fine for driving speeds but there are Nuvi's for that. I know, I know, geocachers don't care about tracklogs. Edited June 11, 2009 by yogazoo Quote Link to comment
yogazoo Posted June 13, 2009 Share Posted June 13, 2009 (edited) I'm hoping for this too, but incorporating a new chipset and associated software changes into the Oregon would probably be a big deal. I disagree and think it would be fairly easy to incorporate a new chipset since the software and firmware, although rolled into a single update these days, is indeed different. The software controls the features and functionality while the firmware controls the reception and signal capturing. I think one of the major "bugs" of the Oregon line has always been accuracy (positional and tracking) since the beginning. If they had a decent "low speed" chipset in the 550, those issues may not be a problem at all. Or maybe I'm not understanding exactly how software and firmware work together. However, to my understanding, there are Nuvi's that have two different chipsets in the same model, and now the 60CSX has two different chipsets also. We'll know soon enough I guess. Edited June 13, 2009 by yogazoo Quote Link to comment
+subthemariner Posted June 14, 2009 Share Posted June 14, 2009 How about fixing the 400 series before adding another line? Quote Link to comment
ZeMartelo Posted June 15, 2009 Share Posted June 15, 2009 How about fixing the 400 series before adding another line? Yes, but how is Garmin going to get more money from you by fixing the 400 series instead of selling you a new unit? Quote Link to comment
+Krandor Posted June 17, 2009 Share Posted June 17, 2009 I have a 60cxs and have been thinking of upgrading to the Oregon line so this looks like it may be a good upgrade point. Quote Link to comment
crazyseany Posted July 6, 2009 Share Posted July 6, 2009 any new info out? I'm looking to buy my 1st GPSr and seriously thinking of the 550. screen? chipset? accuracy? sean Quote Link to comment
+Branky Posted July 6, 2009 Share Posted July 6, 2009 Nothing I have see / beena ble to find out. DARN! any new info out? I'm looking to buy my 1st GPSr and seriously thinking of the 550. screen? chipset? accuracy? sean Quote Link to comment
+ventura_kids Posted July 6, 2009 Share Posted July 6, 2009 There certainly are 2 camps in the accessory ideas field. Those that like basic gps performance, and those that love gadgets. I prefer Nothing extra. Just give me a gps that points to the cache. Have it be accurate and fast. Make the map large enough to read, and have it re-draw quickly. Nothing else....no compass, no camera, no talking or indicating turns. ... and leave out the phone and the internet.....I'll check facebook after I get home. Quote Link to comment
+Renegade Knight Posted July 7, 2009 Share Posted July 7, 2009 I looked at a 400 and a 550 side by side at the garmin booth in GeoWoodstock. It was an overcast day. The screens looked identical in resolution and readability. I wish I had run them up to max brightness to see if there was a difference. Thanks. I bit and got a 300. Glad to know that I don't have to already regret the purchase. Now I'm looking for where to make some suggestions to get the interface as funcational as it could be. They are so close to a great GPS (ignoring the dim dissapointing but tolerable screen). Quote Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.