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Guy wrote:
snip Based on that, I am interested in the groups experience with the current crop of handheld GPS offerings and what features were great and which disappointed. I would love to hear your raves about how happy you are with brand X, but please let's not get into cartoon characters urinating on a brand because Chevy is better than Ford, is better than Dodge, is better than ... I do occasional boat deliveries in the Northeastern U.S. I have a Meridian Color and the optional MapSend BlueNav charting package. That travels with me as a backup navigation system to the equipment that is on the boats. It also has on it, all the routes and waypoints I use regularly. The BlueNav package gives me 80-odd "charts" covering the U.S. Great lakes, the East, Gulf, and West coasts, and down through the Bahamas. What is called a "chart" on BlueNav is actually a Navionics "Small" chart region. Each region contains a number of charts of various scales and charts for many ports and harbors in that region. So I actually have hundreds of charts. To get a feel for the charting, look at the 6xx and 7xx series regions here and you can get a feel for the size of the BlueNav regions: http://www.navionics.com/Charts.asp?...&ChartSizeID=1 The BlueNav package comes with a desktop application for navigation planning, that can be used to place waypoints and build routes. The routes and waypoints can then be uploaded to the Meridian. So this gives me a good navigation capability. I can get on a boat with that and a chartbook and, with no other navigation equipment, find my way around. As a warning, the process Magellan has to use to protect the chart data from illegal copying and distribution makes using the charts somewhat less than a "no brainer" if you are going to be crossing two or three regions in one day or if you are operating on the boundary between two adjacent regions. But it is manageable enough and certainly better than not having the charts. I also use some other PC software (SeaClear II, a great! freeware) and a GPS utility named GPS Utility (free to try, nominal cost to buy) to handle my interactions between SeaClear, the Meridian and other software packages. Those let me archive, edit, and manipulate tracks, waypoints, and routes to my heart's content. Garmin has comparable offerings in both hardware and software that I have not used, I assume those will do about the same things to about the same level of satisfaction as the Magellan stuff. If anyone that does not own both brands of hardware and software tells you that either one is better than the other, don't believe them. It boils down to user preferences and perceptions and the dreaded "I bought it, so it has to be best" syndrome can be very misleading. If I were going to buy a new handheld today, I would give the Magellan eXplorist XL serious consideration because it has a larger display than my Meridian, can use the software I already own, and uses a very similar menu system. I would also look at the offerings from other companies and drop by West Marine or somewhere like that to see what else is on the market. Jack -- Jack Erbes in Ellsworth, Maine, USA - jackerbes at adelphia dot net (also receiving email at jacker at midmaine.com) |
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