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02-01-2015, 12:31 PM
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#1
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: OH.
Posts: 228
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Handheld GPS for Hiking
I am old school, map/compass but want to move to GPS for canyon country, anyone know of the latest and lightest?
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07 E-350
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02-01-2015, 01:36 PM
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#2
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Arcata, CA
Posts: 623
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Re: Handheld GPS for Hiking
Unless you're one of the couple dozen people in this country without a smart phone, I'd use that.
If you want to stay old school, you can use the phone's GPS for basic lat/long and pick your position out on a map.
I use an app called Back Country Navigator (BCNav). I allows you to store maps off line to use out in no-cell-coverage country. I use it for road maps and also small areas of USGS topo and air photo for hiking.
You get all the functionality of a hand held GPS plus the 1001 other things you can do with a smart phone.
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2002 E350 7.3 PSD
Quigley 4x4, EB50 floorplan
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02-01-2015, 07:29 PM
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#3
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Site Team
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Santa Fe, NM
Posts: 1,202
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Re: Handheld GPS for Hiking
But be aware GPS may not always work in canyons if there aren't enough satellites overhead
Don
__________________
-Don-
Life and baseball both sometimes are not fair, but it is how you play the hops that counts. —Scott Miller, NYT Sports
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02-01-2015, 10:30 PM
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#4
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: San Diego, CA
Posts: 531
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Re: Handheld GPS for Hiking
I recently sold my Garmin 60csx & picked up a Garmin Montana. So far it has been great but I'm still getting used to using it. Not the most compact unit but the screen is large & readable.
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2013 E-350 6.8L V10 4x4 RB50, penthouse top, Aluminess bumpers
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02-02-2015, 12:03 AM
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#5
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: Switzerland
Posts: 1,018
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Re: Handheld GPS for Hiking
Take à look to GaiaGPS apps for iOS or Android. It's a great apps which allows to download for free several different maps (topo, USGS, USFS, terrain, etc.) for everywhere on the planet. I use it since three years and won't go without it anymore...
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Travelling in VivaLaVida (custom 2010 6.0 Ford E-350 Extended with U-Joint 4WD conversion)
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02-02-2015, 06:08 AM
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#6
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Reynoldsburg, Ohio
Posts: 3,774
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Re: Handheld GPS for Hiking
Quote:
Originally Posted by Viejo
Unless you're one of the couple dozen people in this country without a smart phone, I'd use that.
.....the 1001 other things you can do with a smart phone.
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Yo----make that a couple dozen and one more too---ME!!
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02-02-2015, 07:47 AM
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#7
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Site Team
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Covina
Posts: 1,317
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Re: Handheld GPS for Hiking
I really believe the Garmin 60CSX is the best for basic nav. the batteries last a long time you can load a micro card for maps and its simple. The only thing is it has a smaller screen but I only need it to confirm I'm right on the maps.
Watch out using a phone for longer hikes just because the battery will go fast using the gps.
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Kelly, Claudine, Sophie dog, Bell the redheaded step child and Gooseberry RIP.
Most the time the Copilot is Now Sophie dog the noise maker.
2000 7.3 PS Quigley/RB30 with a 6 window poptop.
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02-02-2015, 08:48 AM
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#8
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: San Diego
Posts: 887
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Re: Handheld GPS for Hiking
I second the Gaia App and use it continuously. The Pro version allows you to download multiple map layer types at the same time.
Works great on bike rides too. Dropped my phone in my pocket yesterday, hit record and it tracked all the important stats of the ride.
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03-01-2015, 10:29 AM
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#9
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2014
Location: North Vancouver BC
Posts: 295
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Re: Handheld GPS for Hiking
I use my iphone in conjuction with a bluetooth GPS receiver made by DUAl. XPGS 150A.
This is far more accurate than any smart phone +/- 2.5Meters.
I use downloaded maps and put my phone in airplane mode with just bluetooth turned on.
This minimizes power consumption on my phone. I use an app called gpsNAV with offline downloaded map data.
I ride my mtb alone alot in areas with no cel reception and this works very well.
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2002 E250 5.4 4R70W 2wd 3.5 inch lift Pleasure-Way Traverse on 16x8 with 265/75/16's
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