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Best GPS


Silversummer

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4 hours ago, Silversummer said:

What is the most user-friendly GPS for geocaching?

 

It depends of your personal preferences.  Size, display, buttons or not, battery life, and much more.

My advise is, go to a store and take some in your hands and have a good look.  Even better, go to a Geocaching event near you and I'm sure, cacher there will be happy to show your there devices.  Maybe you can take a tour and test some.

 

Today, you might even take into considerations to get GC software for your mobile phone, which also will work quite well.

 

Greetings, Mausebiber

 

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There is a learning curve with all GPS units.  Probably the easiest is the Magellan eXplorist GC series, but there is Magellan's rep for awful customer service and it isn't the greatest unit.  Next to that for ease of use would probably be one of Garmin's touch screen units, such as the Oregon, Montana and eTrex touch series. 

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24 minutes ago, Flynn230103 said:

A great starter GPS that I use is the Garmin Etrex 10

 

Sorry, but this is a GPS I would NOT recommend.  You cannot load maps, no color for the display, minimum free storage, no routing, and much more missing, any phone would be a much better choice. If you looking for something inexpensive, try to get a good used Oregon 600 for about $100.- - $150.-

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20 hours ago, Mausebiber said:

Sorry, but this is a GPS I would NOT recommend.  You cannot load maps, no color for the display, minimum free storage, no routing, and much more missing, any phone would be a much better choice. If you looking for something inexpensive, try to get a good used Oregon 600 for about $100.- - $150.-

+1

When I first started looking into GPSr units, I did some research and learned how the eTrex 10 is so much more limited than most other units.  I would not recommend an eTrex 10 to anyone. An eTrex 20, which is what I've been using, would be better and may be in a suitable price range.  The 20 was replaced with the 20x, so it might be possible to find a 20 at a reasonable price.

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? well then...

 

I guess I like the Etrex 10 because of the minimalism. While I was out with a fellow cacher he had a top of the line Garmin, and we spent a lot of time trying to figure out how to use it. He had had it for a while but still things were happening that we had no idea how to fix. What I like about the Etrex is that with about 15 minutes to spare you can learn all about how to use it. If you are fussed about maps and directions you just bring along your phone as well. I have gotten great accuracy with the GPS and is a much better tool than a phone. You do have your own opinions, such as touchscreen or joystick prefferation but this is what I like. 

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1 hour ago, Flynn230103 said:

? well then...

 

I guess I like the Etrex 10 because of the minimalism. While I was out with a fellow cacher he had a top of the line Garmin, and we spent a lot of time trying to figure out how to use it. He had had it for a while but still things were happening that we had no idea how to fix. What I like about the Etrex is that with about 15 minutes to spare you can learn all about how to use it. If you are fussed about maps and directions you just bring along your phone as well. I have gotten great accuracy with the GPS and is a much better tool than a phone. You do have your own opinions, such as touchscreen or joystick prefferation but this is what I like. 

Just an FYI - the eTrex 20 is also pretty minimal.  The 30 has a bit more functionality, but not enough for me to think it was worth the extra cost over the 20.  I think the 20 has the same options as the 10, but just has more memory to hold maps and more caches (up to 5000 caches, not 500) and it has a color screen.  If you already have a 10 and it works for you, then that's great.  If you ever feel that you need more memory and/or maps, then rest assured that you could get a 20 and not have to re-learn how to use the GPSr because it works the same way.

 

And if you do get a 20 and want maps, then know that you don't need to buy them from Garmin.  You can get free maps online that are just as good, or even better, than the maps sold by Garmin.

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13 hours ago, Flynn230103 said:

? well then...

 

I guess I like the Etrex 10 because of the minimalism. While I was out with a fellow cacher he had a top of the line Garmin, and we spent a lot of time trying to figure out how to use it. He had had it for a while but still things were happening that we had no idea how to fix. What I like about the Etrex is that with about 15 minutes to spare you can learn all about how to use it. If you are fussed about maps and directions you just bring along your phone as well. I have gotten great accuracy with the GPS and is a much better tool than a phone. You do have your own opinions, such as touchscreen or joystick prefferation but this is what I like. 

Apart from a short time using a Garmin Nuvi I started out using an Etrex 10. It is a great little unit with excellent accuracy although, as others have noted, it does have limitations. i.e. lack of (detailed) maps and cache storage capacity.

As for lack of maps it was, to me, a minor hindrance as I would  use my in car Nuvi to get me close as possible then use the Etrex.

As for capacity, I had to confine my searching to a particular area and  used GSAK to help target caches. I found that about 300 caches to be its workable limit.

The above two examples necessitated my upgrade to an etrex 20 when I started caching in foreign countries where I could, for example, load all caches in Mexico to the Etrex and, it is very handy having a map in a foreign city (although I sometimes don't bother like recently in Turkey, Israel, Jordan and Qatar where I was still able to find caches). The etrex 20, and 30, have SD card facility for mass storage of maps and caches.

I've now been using the Etrex 20 (20x now because I lost a couple along the way) for almost six years and I don't see any great benefit for me in upgrading to anything else.

If someone gifted  you a 10 great, but if funds are tight look around cheap, little used, 20 or 20x. They're out there.

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9 hours ago, CRS_GEO said:

Also consider which GPSr will support Wherigo caches.  I am relatively new and am trying to figure out how to advance to these additional options and can't do it with my eTrex 20. 

 

 

The problem with this is that those GPS units are no longer manufactured, although the Oregon is, but without Wherigo compatibility.  The Colorado and the early Oregons came with Wherigo functionality. 

 

If Wherigo is really that big a thing, there are apps on either platform (iPhone and Android) that suffice, assuming you have the use of a smartphone.

 

As has been previously mentioned, there's a learning curve associated with a handheld device.  I don't use my handheld quite as much, but there are still times when I find it better suited to the day I go caching than my phone, especially in areas I know cell service will be spotty at best.

 

Best is a subjective word as each person will have different opinions on what their preferences are.  I've always been a Garmin guy so I enjoyed my 60 CSx and my Monterra but I find myself always gravitating back to my Montana more often than not.  The best way to find out what you like and don't like is to get your hands on some of the units and play around with them.  I suggest contacting your local caching friends to see if they'd let you use their unit (I suggest them being in attendance so they can show you some of the features).  That's really the only way you'll get a feel for what you like and dislike.

 

Touch screen units vs. buttons, expanded map storage vs. basic map storage, number of caches you can have on the unit vs. limited storage, routing options (navigation) vs. non-routing capabilities.  These are only a few of the differences you'll run into.

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My husband and I use a Garmin etrex 20 and it is way more than what we need.  We don’t use maps - we just use the Geocaches, the compass - and sometimes the Waypoints when we’re traveling and don’t have computer access for downloading geocaches near our motel.  This is where a phone comes in handy for those areas where you suddenly decide to look for a geocache. 

So I guess it depends if you are going into this hobby big time or just playing at it casually like we are but I do recommend the Garmin etrex 20.  I agree with others that it would be helpful to spend time with other geocachers showing you how they use various devices.  Also checking out Youtube videos can be very helpful.

Happy Geocaching!

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48 minutes ago, Harry Dolphin said:
10 hours ago, niraD said:

Yep. At this point, Wherigo is essentially a smartphone app, not a GPSr feature.

 

Sad.  Geocaching used to be about using a GPSr to find a cache.  Now, it's about smartphones.  Cache type not able to be found using a GPSr?!?  Sad degradation of the game.

 

FWIW, it isn't just Wherigo. Intercaches have always been smartphone based. Wherigo ended up there mainly because Groundspeak and Garmin haven't done anything with it for ages, so the support has been from the user community, which has created the smartphone apps.

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On 11/16/2018 at 8:17 PM, Harry Dolphin said:

 

Sad.  Geocaching used to be about using a GPSr to find a cache.  Now, it's about smartphones.  Cache type not able to be found using a GPSr?!?  Sad degradation of the game.

 

I'd say that geocaching needed to reach out to the smartphone demographic or run the risk of being a dying activity amongst a fringe minority of people.  Spending a few hundred dollars on a GPS unit so someone can cache once and find that it's not for them can be a bit expensive as well as a bit of a limiting prospect.  All they're left with is an expensive paper weight.  While it's certainly had some drawbacks, it's also managed to grow the activity so that it's able to be more accessible by the general population.

 

It seems to me that the GPS functions of a phone mirror that of a standalone GPS unit much better than they did when they first arrived on the scene.

 

I'd say the sadder aspect is that Groundspeak abandoned the cache type rather than continue offering updates with their builder.  Thanks to outside developers, Wherigos are still an active part of this activity, despite the fact that the two companies who started Wherigo chose to leave it dangling in the wind.  Smartphones have filled the gap that the parent company created.

 

I use both for my caching, and did so this past weekend as I was unable to load the new caches in a wilderness area that were published the morning of a hike, but did load all the other older ones in the park in my GPS unit as well as the ones in the surrounding area I was interested in finding before or after the hike.

Edited by coachstahly
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On 11/17/2018 at 1:17 AM, Harry Dolphin said:

 

Sad.  Geocaching used to be about using a GPSr to find a cache.  Now, it's about smartphones.  Cache type not able to be found using a GPSr?!?  Sad degradation of the game.

 

Hardly a new development though.  I started in 2009 and used just a smartphone for a year and a half.  I bought my first Garmin (an eTrex Legend) in 2011, and my second (an Oregon 600) in 2014.  For me, Wherigos have always required the smartphone.

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3 hours ago, IceColdUK said:
On 11/16/2018 at 5:17 PM, Harry Dolphin said:

Sad.  Geocaching used to be about using a GPSr to find a cache.  Now, it's about smartphones.  Cache type not able to be found using a GPSr?!?  Sad degradation of the game.

 

Hardly a new development though.  I started in 2009 and used just a smartphone for a year and a half.  I bought my first Garmin (an eTrex Legend) in 2011, and my second (an Oregon 600) in 2014.  For me, Wherigos have always required the smartphone.

 

For me, it was never really about using a GPSr to find a cache. It was about navigating to the coordinates (via whatever method/technology) to find a cache. And I started in 2006, before the iPhone was announced.

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10 hours ago, niraD said:

It was about navigating to the coordinates (via whatever method/technology) to find a cache.

This^^^

 

A dedicated GPSr device, or a smartphone, both with the capability of navigating to coordinates ... to find a cache.  Is it about the device used, or the navigation and finding of the cache by using coordinates and hints and puzzles or whatever?  To me, it's about giving coordinates, hints, clues, and you navigate (via GPSr, phone, map and compass) to FIND the cache.

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I have an Oregon 550, a Montana 650 and the Monterra. The latter (Android based) is great for Wherigo and as a "music box" but as a GPSr in general it simply is no good, however, I have read just the opposite for other owners so .........

 

The Oregon and Montana are very good units thought the sizes and totally different.

 

As some have said, depends on personal preferences so see if you can get one and be able to "play" with it for a few days before you buy

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1 hour ago, Z_Statman said:

I have an Oregon 550, a Montana 650 and the Monterra. The latter (Android based) is great for Wherigo and as a "music box" but as a GPSr in general it simply is no good, however, I have read just the opposite for other owners so .........

 

The Oregon and Montana are very good units thought the sizes and totally different.

 

As some have said, depends on personal preferences so see if you can get one and be able to "play" with it for a few days before you buy

 

I don't like my Monterra as much as I do my Montana, even though it's supposedly got more features to make it easier.

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That's such a personal question and a difficult one to give an answer for. I've used Garmin touch models and now just purchased the GPSMAP 66st and really like it. I like it's accuracy, features and buttons that I use use with gloves in the winter. I also purchase Garmin's 24k topo maps, they are routable and have tons of data for when we go hiking, etc.

 

What did you end up buying?

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I am searching for a GPX unit that is easy to use for navigating to set coordinates.  I had a 450 Oregon but quite frankly it is not worth a pinch.  Unbelievably it does not allow me to input coordinates.

 

Any suggestions please from this knowledgeable group.  I spend a lot of time in the bush, and while the Oregon 450 is OK for waypoints and so on it cannot take me to a coordinate.  I've tried various smartphone phone GPS's but for reliability and safety I prefer a standalone unit with a smartphone back-up as I explore remote areas of Western Australia on foot.  Even free Apps seem better than the Garmin 450.  Not sure why they were such cheapskates.  Seems the Oregon 650 has that capability.  I would like to load many maps, and prefer a unit that is good in strong sunlight.

 

Any help would be appreciated!

Edited by Imadogman
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Thanks Ice Cold.  My Oregon is a 450.  I seem to recall in my frustrated reading last year that the 450 does not have this functionality but the 450t does. I've looked for the reference again tonight, but can't find it, but will keep looking.  Also, the unit does not easily tell you coordinates of where you are (you have to create a waypoint, find it on the map and open the point for that data).

I want a GPS that will enable me to program in a coordinate to go to a particular place.

Other GPSs seem to be able to do this, including my smart phone, but not this Oregon 450 brick.  If there are some 450 experts I would appreciate confirmation / resolution to this.  I have spent many hours going through forums, manual and the internet without success.

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10 hours ago, Imadogman said:

Thanks Ice Cold.  My Oregon is a 450.  I seem to recall in my frustrated reading last year that the 450 does not have this functionality but the 450t does. I've looked for the reference again tonight, but can't find it, but will keep looking.  Also, the unit does not easily tell you coordinates of where you are (you have to create a waypoint, find it on the map and open the point for that data).

I want a GPS that will enable me to program in a coordinate to go to a particular place.

Other GPSs seem to be able to do this, including my smart phone, but not this Oregon 450 brick.  If there are some 450 experts I would appreciate confirmation / resolution to this.  I have spent many hours going through forums, manual and the internet without success.

 

You might need to be more specific about what you want to do.  You first said that you can't figure out how to "program coordinates", but you seem to know how to mark a waypoint, which is the first step to "program coordinates".

 

You can view the current coordinates in the dashboard.  In the picture, I'm on the Compass screen and I selected the large data field dashboard.  Tap that field (the one field on that dashboard) to select a new display.  In the example, I selected "Location (lat/lon)".  Now while viewing the compass screen, the current location coordinates are shown.

 

I don't need to have the current location in view all the time, so I usually select a "Small Data Fields" dashboard.  I then choose the four most useful fields by tapping each field and setting them.  Most often, I have "Location (selected)" and "Waypoint at Dest", so that when I start navigation to either a waypoint or Geocache, I see the name of the waypoint and its coordinates (so I know I'm hiking to the correct spot).  There are many possibilities for each data field, so experiment and see what is most useful to you.  Set different ones on the Map screen, that apply best to that screen.  Set different fields in each screen for different Profiles.

 

One of the most important things is to be sure you are not always using only the "Geocaching Dashboard", because it only applies to Geocaches, and doesn't show custom info.  If you use the Geocaching Dashboard, maybe set that on one screen, and have the small data fields dashboard on another.  And you may have Profiles set up, to switch all settings between car navigation or hiking to a Geocache (for example).  Remember that Profiles can be copied and re-named, so you can keep a set of settings and change just a few.  I have "CachingCar" based on my customized "Geocaching Profile", but set up with all the displays I would use while street routing.

 

If you prefer tutorial videos, it's tough to find much that still exists for the 450 specifically.  The one in my picture is a 550, and the 650 is similar, but with more customization.  You can watch even a 600/650 video and get a general idea of many features, although names of options may be different, and some of course won't apply.

 

Good luck!

 

 

oregon-compass.jpg

 

 

 

Edited by kunarion
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On 1/20/2019 at 5:13 AM, Imadogman said:

Thanks Ice Cold.  My Oregon is a 450.  I seem to recall in my frustrated reading last year that the 450 does not have this functionality but the 450t does. I've looked for the reference again tonight, but can't find it, but will keep looking.  Also, the unit does not easily tell you coordinates of where you are (you have to create a waypoint, find it on the map and open the point for that data).

I want a GPS that will enable me to program in a coordinate to go to a particular place.

Other GPSs seem to be able to do this, including my smart phone, but not this Oregon 450 brick.  If there are some 450 experts I would appreciate confirmation / resolution to this.  I have spent many hours going through forums, manual and the internet without success.

The 450 and 450t should have the same functionality.  The only difference would be that the "t" version has Garmin's topo maps pre-installed.

 

Entering destination coords should be possible with the 450.  It can be tough to describe the process without having the unit in my hand and seeing how it's currently set-up.  It might be possible to attend an event and ask someone there to help you out with your GPSr.  That in-person help can be invaluable.

 

 

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On 1/20/2019 at 2:18 PM, Imadogman said:

Looking through the manual again, the photos show a "where to" button, which gives a coordinate option.  However that button does not show in my unit.  

 

It's been a while since I used our Oregon, but it may depend on the mode you're in.  If you're in auto navigate, try switching to geocaching mode.  Then hit "where to" and see if coordinates shows up as an option.

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I should have looked harder.  ?sometimes you just have to look again I suppose.  I have explored the SetUp button and options at length, and have found in there a section called "main menu".  Looking through there I found the "Go To" button option, which was not installed. So now that I have installed it as part of the profile menu for my activity, there is a Coordinates option in that sub menu, allowing coordinate navigation.

 

One question though: in putting in UTM Coordinates on the 450 there is seven spaces for seven numbers on the Northing and Eastings in the 450 coordinates "go to" menu.  If I am short the last digit on a coordinate -- so six numbers on the Easting and Seven on the Northing, will that make any significant difference on the ground? 

Example of a known coordinate from a book I would use is:  Zone 55       731450E  6370300N  Notice six digits in the Easting and Seven in the Northing.

(In case you want to look at it, it really is El Dorado in Australia!)

 

Thanks for the replies, they have been helpful to me an I appreciate your responses.

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1 hour ago, Imadogman said:

One question though: in putting in UTM Coordinates on the 450 there is seven spaces for seven numbers on the Northing and Eastings in the 450 coordinates "go to" menu.  If I am short the last digit on a coordinate -- so six numbers on the Easting and Seven on the Northing, will that make any significant difference on the ground? 

Example of a known coordinate from a book I would use is:  Zone 55       731450E  6370300N  Notice six digits in the Easting and Seven in the Northing.

(In case you want to look at it, it really is El Dorado in Australia!)

 

The UTM coordinates are actually metres east and north of the bottom left hand corner of the zone's grid rectangle, so if it wants an extra digit for the eastings add a leading zero, i.e. your example would be 0731450.

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