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"Capt. Rob" wrote in news:1163209502.939415.46470
@h54g2000cwb.googlegroups.com: A few people have told me that the maps on the Garmin 492 are somewhat weak, and not really very detailed compared to some slighty more expensive models that take chart chips. Has anyone here used the 492 enough to confirm this? I'm ready to dump it and buy a better model if that's the case. And no, the 492 is not for sale. Because you're a really smart fellow, anyways, and ALWAYS keep a paper chart 'n pencil course plotted every hour in case the computers screw up, does it really matter if the chart plotter has the finest picture money can buy? You'll have a radar to plot your course down the canyons of buildings and trees to watch. Only thing the GPS needs to tell you is your Lat/Long to plot on the paper chart, anyways...right? Is that worth another thousand dollars to have it on this little color LCD screen?....NOT. We cheat on Lionheart. The fancy GPS receivers drive an old Yeoman paper chart plotter I salvaged from the captain's trash can. I glued the boards to the bottom of the chart table top. My pencil fits in the hole in its puck so I don't have to haul the numbers in from the helm every hour. The chart on the Yeoman looks just like a Maptech chart book....because it IS a Maptech chart book...(c; Notice there are 3 keypoints on a Maptech chart book to calibrate my Yeoman, which has the charts pre-programmed by number into its memory for easy calibration. If you find one GET IT! Works great and has a HUGE screen you can see in near darkness...(c; http://www.yeomanuk.co.uk/ Thanks for any advice. BTW, the GPS will have a mount at the pedestal and below, so I'll want a model with internal antenna and then add a remote antenna for below deck. You don't need a remote antenna in a plastic boat. Try laying your Garmin handheld under the table or inside one of the wooden or plastic storage bins under the seats. Let it run a while and see what kind of plot it makes on its little chart. I mounted our antennas over in the corner of the console under the hard top behind the windshield of the Amel Sharki 41 ketch. It sees the satellites just fine through the plastic top and lexan windscreen. My old Eagle handheld got its button pressed in my baggage and came on, dutifully logging itself onto 12 birds and plotting our course until I found it running while looking for some dry socks....(c; As long as there's no metal shielding over the dome, GPS works right through all the plastic they keep calling "fiberglass". Larry -- My calendar must be wrong.... In all the stores, it's ALREADY Christmas! |