Jump to content

Converting Miles to feet on my Garmin?


Recommended Posts

I looked in my old 12 manual and didnt see any mention of any way to change it...I think you can still get a downloadable copy of the manual at garmins web page. On my G3+ it changes automaticly at .1miles to feet (~500')

 

"You've got to be very careful if you don't know where you're going, because you might not get there." Yogi Berra

JeepNAz@aol.com

Link to comment

quote:
Originally posted by 1groundpounder:

Is it possible to get my Garmin GPS 12 to switch from miles to feet. It's hard trying to visualize .05 of a mile when I'm getting close. I can't find my manual. Any help?

1groundpounder


As far as I know they don't have an update yet but I would love to be proven wrong. My Geo partner has one & it usually gets very good reception but the ".10 mile" thing really sucks. Guess we'll just have to find them by coords alone.

 

When you come to a fork in the road, take it.

Link to comment

Maybe this is because I am a math person, but I always just kinda transpose the numbers as I am hiking. Based on .1 Mi ~ 500 ft, I just easily see things like .05 as 250ft, or .01 as 50ft, and so on. Once I am under a mile I always start thinking in terms of feet. If I am standing on the top of a hill, I have a very difficult time visualizing how far away 1/4 a mile is, but it really easy to see it as around 1250 feet....I just think of it as around 4 football fields long.

 

Good luck

Link to comment

Macro, in my case, it's not so much a matter of being able to visualize how close I am, but in knowing that I'm within a specified distance. For the MinuteWar game, we have to get within 10 meters (approximately 28 ft or .0062 miles) to capture an enemy's flag. Since the flags are imaginary, I have only my GPS coordinates to go by. And since my readout rounds to 0.01, I've been making myself get a zero reading to be sure I'm within the 10 meters. It would be nice to have more accurate measurements, but I guess you get what you pay for. (Good thing my birthday's coming up, at least. icon_wink.gif)

Link to comment

Macro, in my case, it's not so much a matter of being able to visualize how close I am, but in knowing that I'm within a specified distance. For the MinuteWar game, we have to get within 10 meters (approximately 28 ft or .0062 miles) to capture an enemy's flag. Since the flags are imaginary, I have only my GPS coordinates to go by. And since my readout rounds to 0.01, I've been making myself get a zero reading to be sure I'm within the 10 meters. It would be nice to have more accurate measurements, but I guess you get what you pay for. (Good thing my birthday's coming up, at least. icon_wink.gif)

Link to comment

Change setting to METRIC. Then convert meters to feet. (1 meter =1.1yd = 3.3 feet). Find 10% of # meters,and add the 10% to meters, total = yards, then 3x= feet. For example, convert 40 meters to feet... 40m + 4(10% of 40m)=44yd x 3ft = 132ft

1m = 1.1yd = 3.3ft (close enough for Horseshoes and Handgrenades)

Link to comment

quote:
Originally posted by Geonavigator:

Change setting to METRIC. Then convert meters to feet.


 

Actually, I wouldn't need to convert to feet, since the distance requirements are set up in meters (100 m for uncaptured flags, and 10 m for enemy-owned flags).

 

Unfortunately, it looks like my only choices are miles, kilometers, and whatever "NM" stands for. (But if I used 0.01 km as 1 m, that should give me more accuracy than having to round down to 0.00 miles, which is what I've been doing since I can never be sure whether my 0.01 within 0.0062...it could actually be as high as 0.0149, which is more than twice what I have to be within.)

 

Thanks for the suggestion. icon_smile.gif

Link to comment

quote:
Originally posted by Geonavigator:

Change setting to METRIC. Then convert meters to feet.


 

Actually, I wouldn't need to convert to feet, since the distance requirements are set up in meters (100 m for uncaptured flags, and 10 m for enemy-owned flags).

 

Unfortunately, it looks like my only choices are miles, kilometers, and whatever "NM" stands for. (But if I used 0.01 km as 1 m, that should give me more accuracy than having to round down to 0.00 miles, which is what I've been doing since I can never be sure whether my 0.01 within 0.0062...it could actually be as high as 0.0149, which is more than twice what I have to be within.)

 

Thanks for the suggestion. icon_smile.gif

Link to comment

quote:
Originally posted by 1groundpounder:

Thanks for the responses. It's about what I thought. I guess I'm in the market for a new one, what would you recommend? I know I want one with the conversion to feet and with the averaging feature like my 12.

1Groundpounder


A Mag 315 is great for just caching (good reception, easy to use)& should find one for under $149.

But you can get any of about 20 suggestions on this subject!

icon_biggrin.gif

 

When you come to a fork in the road, take it.

Link to comment

quote:
Originally posted by 1groundpounder:

Thanks for the responses. It's about what I thought. I guess I'm in the market for a new one, what would you recommend? I know I want one with the conversion to feet and with the averaging feature like my 12.

1Groundpounder


A Mag 315 is great for just caching (good reception, easy to use)& should find one for under $149.

But you can get any of about 20 suggestions on this subject!

icon_biggrin.gif

 

When you come to a fork in the road, take it.

Link to comment

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.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...