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#1
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suds wrote:
But to place the unit in a waterproof bag will mean that it will again be handheld and far more difficult to use in open water. Has anyone else worked through this situation? What is the solution? I have mounted on the dash of my 4x4 (I "dive" in the woods) a Radio Shack gooseneck style cellphone holder that has adjustable jaws. I feel a GPS in a freezer-weight Ziploc bag would be well-protected against all but lengthy immersion. The bag would allow use of all buttons. Holder affixes to base disc via rather strong suction cup; a lanyard could be added for safety. This mount seems impervious to the vibrations of backwoods travel and a strong sealable bag (with positive inflation as insurance against water?) should make the GPS both useable & reasonably proof against the tides. Yours in the north Maine woods, Pete Hilton aka The Ent -- Old age is always 15 years older than I am. B. M. Baruch |
#2
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![]() "Peter H" wrote in message ... I have mounted on the dash of my 4x4 (I "dive" in the woods) a Radio Shack gooseneck style cellphone holder that has adjustable jaws. I feel a GPS in a freezer-weight Ziploc bag would be well-protected against all but lengthy immersion. I bought a waterproof pouch for my GPS today. It only slightly decreases the signal strength and you can operate all the functions through the bag. It works great except that you have to put down the paddle to make any adjustments to the unit. With the trades blowing like they were today, that means you'll be rolling in the troughs before you get the thing up to eyeball level. I'll stop by the kama'aina Radio Shack and look for this "gooseneck style cellphone holder that has adjustable jaws." Perhaps it'll do the job and I can rivet it on to the kayak. Thanks suds |
#3
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![]() "Wade Norton" wrote in message . net... Suds, Like you, my wife and I enjoy scuba and kayaking. We live in the Pacific Northwest so we envy your "warm" climate. We get to Hawaii about once a year in addition to other warm water dive travel. We're relatively new to paddling so we haven't done any kayak travel, yet. Yikes, drysuit diving off a kayak! Did you read the August issue of "Rodales's Scuba Diving?" Or have you seen this website? http://www.whidbeydive.com/page2.html You couldn't do drysuit diving out here. There is no way you can paddel any distance w/o getting completely soaked so you'd have to keep the suit on the entire time. We just have too much wind, swells, and current. It makes for a lot of fun in the kayak but I'm glad I just have to deal with a wet suit. Oh, and please don't try paddling out to Hawai'i. I know airfares have been going up but we need all the tourist dollars we can get so we don't want to lose you. ;^) I've never used a GPS for diving other than finding my dive sites (shore dives). I have a friend that takes his GPS on dive boats, but I just don't take that risk. I do put the GPS in a protective bag for my kayak trips. I use Voyageur bags for the GPS ( http://www.voyageur-gear.com/index.php ) .. Out here you might get your regulator hose cut and extra weight on your belt if you try bringing a GPS onboard. Local dive ops don't want others to learn the location of their "dive spots." Here's the "water proof" criteria for GPS units. I snatched this from the Garmin website Most Garmin® GPS units are waterproof in accordance with IEC 529 IPX7. IEC 529 is a European system of test specification standards for classifying the degrees of protection provided by the enclosures of electrical equipment. An IPX7 designation means the GPS case can withstand accidental immersion in one meter of water for up to 30 minutes. An IPX8 designation is for continuous underwater use. Like you, I've tried to find a "truly waterproof GPS" (IPX8) and haven't found one. I would tend to agree with your kayak expert. Until someone builds a IPX8 GPS I would continue to bag the GPS. If the market existed, they'd do it. I've got camera's and lights that are good down to 150' or more. It's just a question of money. Right now the number of kayakers that need a waterproof gps isn't attracting the manufactures attention. Well, I should let you go. You need to go outside and look at the sun. You've only got a couple days left to do so. ;^) suds |
#4
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Your dealer is right, all the Garmins have battery compartments that are not
waterproof. At least for the GPS-76 series though, the rest is REALLY waterproof. My experience is that you get a little water in the battery compartment, but the thing keeps working after being dunked. Especially if sal****er is involved, you need to clean it out later and get a little rust preventative in there. No big deal though. "suds" sudsysadie@hawaii{is the #1 state for Spam eaters}.rr.com wrote in message ... Hi, I've got a question about using a handheld GPS on a kayak but first allow me to introduce myself. I've been lurking here for a couple of months. My wife and I are avid scuba divers. A year ago we had the incredible misfortune of being stranded on Oahu while between jobs. Now we are here until we retire. Tough, huh? So we learn to surf and keep up the diving but it gets rather old going to the same spots on a crowded, tourist filled, cattle boat every weekend. While on a trip to the Big Island, we take a kayak tour of the Kona Coast and it immediately occurs to both of us that a kayak is a fantastic way to go diving. To make a long story short, we bought a couple of used kayaks and have started diving from them. It's great fun. Now my question. The manual for my handheld GPS (a Garmin 12 http://www.garmin.com/products/gps12/ ) says that it's waterproof. That's great because I have the swivel mount for it and would really like to secure it to my kayak in such a manner that it will always be positioned in front of me while paddling. This will be very beneficial when finding those dive spots offshore. However, my local kayak expert insists that if I don't keep it in a waterproof bag, I'll regret it. He says the electronics are waterproof but the battery housing is not. I've had to replace enough dive lights to understand what that means. But to place the unit in a waterproof bag will mean that it will again be handheld and far more difficult to use in open water. Has anyone else worked through this situation? What is the solution? suds |
#5
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hi folks.
i haven't read through many threads on this group, so sorry if this is duplicate information, but i highly recommend aquapac.com aquapacs for GPS and digital camera protection in the water. i took my canon elph s330 snorkeling with me in thailand and got some great photos. it's much, much cheaper than any underwater camera "housing" and should also work great for waterproofing a gps. "DaveH" wrote in message ... Your dealer is right, all the Garmins have battery compartments that are not waterproof. At least for the GPS-76 series though, the rest is REALLY waterproof. My experience is that you get a little water in the battery compartment, but the thing keeps working after being dunked. Especially if sal****er is involved, you need to clean it out later and get a little rust preventative in there. No big deal though. "suds" sudsysadie@hawaii{is the #1 state for Spam eaters}.rr.com wrote in message ... Hi, I've got a question about using a handheld GPS on a kayak but first allow me to introduce myself. I've been lurking here for a couple of months. My wife and I are avid scuba divers. A year ago we had the incredible misfortune of being stranded on Oahu while between jobs. Now we are here until we retire. Tough, huh? So we learn to surf and keep up the diving but it gets rather old going to the same spots on a crowded, tourist filled, cattle boat every weekend. While on a trip to the Big Island, we take a kayak tour of the Kona Coast and it immediately occurs to both of us that a kayak is a fantastic way to go diving. To make a long story short, we bought a couple of used kayaks and have started diving from them. It's great fun. Now my question. The manual for my handheld GPS (a Garmin 12 http://www.garmin.com/products/gps12/ ) says that it's waterproof. That's great because I have the swivel mount for it and would really like to secure it to my kayak in such a manner that it will always be positioned in front of me while paddling. This will be very beneficial when finding those dive spots offshore. However, my local kayak expert insists that if I don't keep it in a waterproof bag, I'll regret it. He says the electronics are waterproof but the battery housing is not. I've had to replace enough dive lights to understand what that means. But to place the unit in a waterproof bag will mean that it will again be handheld and far more difficult to use in open water. Has anyone else worked through this situation? What is the solution? suds |
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