+elrojo14 Posted December 3, 2018 Share Posted December 3, 2018 (edited) My 2019 Geocaching Goals are to find a bunch of benchmarks. Which is fine if I have cell reception. However, I like to Geocache where there is no cell reception and am wondering if there is anyway to download benchmark data to my phone or my Garmin Oregon. Even a laptop if necessary. Thanks in advance for what I hope might be an answer that surprises me. Is there any interest from Groundspeak in allowing benchmark pocket queries that would download the data? That would be nice. edit: Cachly will do it!!! Scroll down for how to do it. Edited December 8, 2018 by elrojo14 To add Cachly details! Quote Link to comment
kayakbird Posted December 4, 2018 Share Posted December 4, 2018 elrojo14, If GSAK is still available, and if you can figure out out how to get Bench Mark information into a GPX file, you can do all kind of sorts for special sub-sets such as &SS marks and even filter for a specific word or phrase (try 'bronze rod' in Arizona), or add selection codes in one of the UserData columns; then create a sort-able excel file for your lap-top. Always liked to do some name Data > Text to Columns slice& dice to place true bench mark strings into linear order. I think that full datasheets can downloaded from the online NGS site by full states or a submitted list of PID's. I do not have a phone - early on just used HH2 GPSr & laptop. Later got a Verizon 'air card' and could find cell signal in some way outback locations for GSAK updates. kayakbird Quote Link to comment
forbin_c Posted December 5, 2018 Share Posted December 5, 2018 Hi rojo, Since you have a Garmin Oregon, it should be a simple matter to import GPX files. The unknown for me is how much Garmin lets you put in there. I added "Download GPX" to my app (at the bottom of the legend, once you show at least one bench mark; it makes a waypoint for every bench mark on the screen). Just click it and save the file somewhere. Then plug in your Oregon via USB and upload the GPX. I'm using the <cmt> field to put stuff, and I don't know what limits Garmin has imposed, or how they would display, since I don't have one of these (though it looks pretty nice!). Let me know if you can get the GPX over to your Oregon, and if so, we can work from there. Quote Link to comment
+elrojo14 Posted December 6, 2018 Author Share Posted December 6, 2018 I did open the .loc file in notepad and noticed it didn't have much other than coordinates and PUID. Which is better than nothing, but on benchmarks not having the datasheet description will effectively leave you searching in circles on some benchmarks where the coordinates are off by a quarter mile or more. I almost think I can upload .gpx to Cachly too! Quote Link to comment
forbin_c Posted December 6, 2018 Share Posted December 6, 2018 Good, so now I know: 1) You need the datasheet description 2) You use Cachly Both good data points. From what I've read, Cachly will import GPX. I'll add the datasheet to the GPX, and see if that helps. Quote Link to comment
+elrojo14 Posted December 7, 2018 Author Share Posted December 7, 2018 forbin_c! Cachly is probably the finest Geocaching app of all time. Why? Because they actively take customer requests and try and implement them into the product. I asked for something for Apple Watch and they had it in a new release three days later!!! Let's ask them to do Benchmark support! If we can get the right data file that has the relevant data, there should be no reason Cachly can't easily display the data for us. I will go ask. Quote Link to comment
+elrojo14 Posted December 7, 2018 Author Share Posted December 7, 2018 (edited) I made a features request on the Cachly Forums. If you can be a help there, I would really appreciate it. http://www.cach.ly/support/index.php?/topic/1533-benchmarking-on-cachly/ Edited December 7, 2018 by elrojo14 Quote Link to comment
+elrojo14 Posted December 7, 2018 Author Share Posted December 7, 2018 So for those of you who don't care about the Cachly forum, you should start caring. If you can convert USGS datasheets into .gpx, Cachly will easily show benchmarks on a map and their data! This is a game changer! Quote Link to comment
forbin_c Posted December 8, 2018 Share Posted December 8, 2018 Yes, the developer (Nicholas Hubbard) cares, which is the most important thing. He's already contacted me to discuss this. I'm confident I can add whatever fields he needs to allow for Cachly display. In the mean time, I added the description to the <desc> field of the .GPX. There's a program in the App Store called GPX Viewer ($0.99). It's slightly convoluted to use, but you can use it to view the bench marks with their descriptions offline. It's no Cachly, but it gets the job done. You might want to check it out as an intermediate step. Quote Link to comment
+elrojo14 Posted December 8, 2018 Author Share Posted December 8, 2018 Ok, huge developments today. Here we go. First, if you have the right .gpx file for benchmarks and upload it to Cachly, Cachly will display the benchmarks on the map and you can click on them and see the full data sheet details! With Cachly's awesome map and compass system, this just made benchmarking in remote locations 100% doable. However, this is where it gets complicated. First, you could always download the entire state's benchmarks. Main problem with that is I downloaded half of California's benchmarks today and it was 31301. It took nearly six hours to download the half of them. If you want to download them all you will need to take these steps. First, download the state list of benchmarks here. ftp://ftp.ngs.noaa.gov/pub/DS_ARCHIVE/DataSheets/ However, that data is not ready to make a .gpx, so you are going to need a converter. I used http://ngs.tsqmadness.com/ngsgpx/index.html. According to Tung8, the converter can't handle that many at one time, so somehow he split it in two. My guess is he opened the .txt in notepad and cut half of the data. Once you convert the data from NGS-GPX, then place the file in your Dropbox and then from Cachly, go to More>Import from Dropbox. Wait for it to import. You might want to do it over night (which is what I will do with the other half of CA's benchmarks I still need to go. You might not have the time or storage space to do such a thing. So the quest to find an easier way to get the data began. And I found one way. Go to https://www.ngs.noaa.gov/datasheets/index.shtml and there are several options here, but make sure you click on the .txt version. I tried doing the County, but it timed out. So then I did it by a quad and then also by radius. Once you are able to get to the next screen that shows the results, you want to select all and then view datasheets. Once that is finished, it will show you "The NGS Data Sheet". Copy all of that text and paste it into a notepad file and save it as a .txt file. You will then need to convert it using NGS-GPX and then place it on your Dropbox for transfer to Cachly. This method will make the files much smaller and easier to use in Cachly. And that there is how you get offline paperless Benchmarking on Cachly!!! Quote Link to comment
+elrojo14 Posted December 15, 2018 Author Share Posted December 15, 2018 Man is Cachly the way to go! Our Death Valley Run to Scotty's Castle is in a week. So I wanted to get the benchmarks I want into my phone. The first thing I did was a radius search using the scaredycatfilms.com as a reference. I wanted the benchmarks from Stovepipe Wells down through negative elevation past the Devil's Cornfield and to the Scotty's Castle Road junction. I switched to Google maps, used the measure feature and found a point that would make a circle radius along that road about 8 miles northwest. I used this page to input the data and it saved the benchmarks along that route perfectly. I did another one up near Scotty's Castle and got a few more I needed. Then I discovered a great feature. You can input up to 200 PIDS into this search feature and get the datasheets from there. So I used a combination of the scaredycatfilms.com and the search for nearby benchmarks page to find individual benchmarks that had already been found so I know they are there and so I can also look for benchmark disks because finding rods doesn't interest me as much. I pasted the datasheets into notepad and saved them as .txt files. I used NGS>>GPX app to convert the .txt to .gpx and then uploaded them to Cachly into one single offline file. See the attached photo for what it looks like on Cachly. I want to get the same .gpx to Tung8 since we will be going together, but why send him the three files I used when Cachly will export my .gpx file to my Dropbox? Cachly is looking great for most of my offline benchmarking needs!!! Quote Link to comment
+Tung8 Posted December 17, 2018 Share Posted December 17, 2018 I just imported the .gpx file elrojo14 exported from Cachly and it worked flawlessly! The hardest part of the import was getting the file into my dropbox account so Cachly could find it. But once it was there, everything came in beautifully! There is a little bit of data juggling to make this work, but the reward of offline BM hunting is well worth it. I won't be doing this for casual BM hunting, but when there is a planned outing, this will make it so much easier. Quote Link to comment
+Atlas Cached Posted December 26, 2018 Share Posted December 26, 2018 Been doing this GSAK for some time. Arizona has >18K Benchmarks. I don't know why Geocaching only recognizes about 1% of all Benchmarks. I use GSAK to export a GPX file to my Garmin units and can hunt Benchmarks just like geocaches using the geocaching interface on my Garmin GPSr, completely offline. Quote Link to comment
+elrojo14 Posted December 28, 2018 Author Share Posted December 28, 2018 We tested out the benchmarking on Cachly last Sunday and it worked great. The only thing better would be if it saved the Geocaching logs and displayed them and their photos. Quote Link to comment
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