DougPaul
Well-known member
The 76-series is best when oriented horizontally. (It was optimized for nautical use sitting on a horizontal chart table.) Your head and body also blocks out some of the sky.I carry it vertically oriented high on the shoulder strap in the non-metallic Garmin-supplied carrying case. I don't relocate it for the descent. I've noticed this on at least two out-and-back tracks.
Mounting it horizontally on top of your head, above your head on a pole, or with an external antenna on top of or above your head is best. Not all of these are practical, however... In practice we generally have to compromise. FWIW, I generally carry my 60CSx in the top (lid) pocket of my pack, oriented as close to vertically as possible. (The best orientation for the 60CSx is vertical.)
I think you missed the history...That's exactly my point - it's half-assed of them to not use the SD card if available. These tracks appear to be invisible to the GPS. Maybe I've missed something.
The earlier Garmin GPSes didn't have removable memory cards. The current storage scheme is an extension of the older structure not a redesign. The uniform architecture (across models) probably makes for simpler and more reliable software design and less user confusion...
Sure it would be nice to have one tool do everything one wants, but somebody is sure to declare something missing... However, the importance of a missing feature is greatly diminished if there is an easy work-around.I know there are other ways to get what I'm looking for but honestly I want to do it all with MapSource. My customers constantly ask for features in my product which are widely available in free products, or with the operating system. One-stop shopping is a big selling point, or a souring point, depending on your view.
I paid for the Garmin - this isn't free/open source software where I'm used to having to use several tools to get a job done.
FWIW, since I work in the Linux environment and run MapSource in a Windows emulator, using GPSBabel to interact the the GPS is standard operating procedure for me. It does everything that I need except load maps into the GPS (which is a rare need these days).
Doug
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