DougPaul
Well-known member
Maybe you are just lucky and got a more robust click stick. In any case, if it does cause you trouble, you will be far from alone.Kevin Rooney said:You boys are hard on your toys. I've been using my Vista about twice a week for 5 or 6 years - no complaints. Clicker stick works fine, and I have no idea what rubber strip you're referring to.
The rubber strip in question is the black strip around the sides of the GPS. Leaving the GPS in a hot car also helps to degrade glue.
If it does what you need then that is good enough. I found that my (original, version #1) would lose lock when under tree coverage. (I would have to find a better spot and/or stop if I wanted to reestablish the lock.) The 60CS and 60CSx displays are certainly much better that the origional Vista. (I have all 3.) I haven't looked at a Vista HCx display, but the reports suggest that it is also much better than the original.I am quite satisfied with the Vistas ability to maintain satellite lock - no complaints there. Occasionally in a narrow canyon I lose contact, but ... you already know where you are so you don't need it for navigation. My primary reason for upgrading is a better screen in bright and dim light.
Check out the tracks from the GPS bakeoff http://www.vftt.org/forums/showthread.php?t=14406. The 60CSx was far better at holding lock and was far more repeatable (and likely more accurate) than the Vista on a typical WMNF below timberline trail. Once you actually use an SIRF-StarIII (or MediaTek MT3 (the Garmin H GPSes)) you are likely to be impressed by the difference in their abilities to hold lock in the field.
Of course, there is no reason that we all have to buy the same model GPSes, but since most of the people on this BBS use a GPS for similar purposes it is not surprising that we tend to choose from the same short list.
Doug
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