Home › Forums › Geocaching in Wisconsin › Tech Talk › Garmin Oregon 550 Series
This topic contains 81 replies, has 17 voices, and was last updated by Ashen15 15 years, 3 months ago.
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11/30/2009 at 4:05 pm #1911116
@lostby7 wrote:
@frizz wrote:
Wow, you are braver than me to take your Oregon into the water! I’m impressed.
Ditto. 😯
Well, it’s rated IPX7, which supposedly gives you protection against “accidental immersion in one meter of water for up to 30 minutes.” It’s been completely dry inside after those…ahem, “accidental” immersions. I wouldn’t take it SCUBA diving!
On the Left Side of the Road...12/01/2009 at 2:17 am #1911117Glad to hear it can do that but I still don’t think I’m brave enough to try!!
12/23/2009 at 1:37 pm #1911118More updates came out (again) last night for the Garmin Oregon series. I really like this update as the unit now shows the cache type icon on the list of closest caches along with the cache names….very cool. (And in case you missed it in a previous update, ECs are now shown with the correct Icon).
They keep tweeking the little things and boy do those little changes add up nicely. This is edging ever closer to a perfect 10 on the way cool GPS scale.
Changes made from version 2.71 to 2.81:
* Added date/time to Elevation Plot page when plot future is active.
* Added display of icons to the lists in Where To? > Waypoints and the Geocaching application.
* Added phone numbers when available to POI review pages.
* Fixed issue where vehicle position would switch between actual and on-road locations.12/23/2009 at 2:05 pm #1911119I wish the wherigo player would be updated to something that doesn’t freeze.
On the Left Side of the Road...12/23/2009 at 2:06 pm #1911120@gotta run wrote:
I wish the wherigo player would be updated to something that doesn’t freeze.
Agreed but I doubt they will be making many (any?) changes to that part of the programming. 😕
12/23/2009 at 2:07 pm #1911121Yeah, I think they’re dependent on what they get from the wherigo folks on that.
On the Left Side of the Road...12/23/2009 at 8:32 pm #1911122I have yet to try the Wherigo on either of our units. Am anxious to try it thou!!
12/26/2009 at 3:08 am #1911123really thinking of getting a 550 for a Christmas gift for my self (although it will be a couple of days late) is it worth the extra $100 for the topo maps, or are the base maps decent enough for navigation in the woods?
12/26/2009 at 3:25 am #1911124@sweetlife wrote:
really thinking of getting a 550 for a Christmas gift for my self (although it will be a couple of days late) is it worth the extra $100 for the topo maps, or are the base maps decent enough for navigation in the woods?
I don’t have TOPO maps and I have never used them. So long as you have the tracklog on and aren’t deep in the backwoods (and if you were you should really have more than just a GPS to be your guide), you should be fine without it…but then again if you do get the TOPO you can also add the city maps on the SD card and toggle back and forth…but then you are looking an another $100 on top of the TOPO.
I guess if you do lots of hiking in the deeps woods it might be worth it.
12/26/2009 at 3:47 am #1911125Most of our caching is non urban caching, the 550 will not be used for routing as our Nuvi works great for that. wanting to upgrade for the Maps and paperless we are currently using a GPS72 and never had maps on a handheld yet
12/26/2009 at 3:49 am #1911126The good news is that you can always add the maps later. My guess is that you will find the base maps to be approximately the same value as “no maps”. But, if you don’t need a map at all…
12/26/2009 at 12:51 pm #1911127I was wondering if anyone had tried making custom maps for their oregon? check out the info here, looks pretty amazing.
http://www.garmin.com/garmin/cms/cache/offonce/us/onthetrail/custommaps#fragment-2
or
http://garmin.blogs.com/my_weblog/2009/11/garmin-makes-custom-maps-free-and-easy.html
I seen this screenshot on another forum and was wondering if garmin has added this compass/map combo option for navigation? I still use a 60Cx & always switch between the two, having both on one would be very nice!
12/26/2009 at 1:29 pm #1911128@sweetlife wrote:
really thinking of getting a 550 for a Christmas gift for my self (although it will be a couple of days late) is it worth the extra $100 for the topo maps, or are the base maps decent enough for navigation in the woods?
Our 400t came with topo maps and we found the level of detail unnecessary for caching.
When we bought the 550 we also bought city navigator maps for auto routing purposes. We have likewise added CN to the 440t and we now use those maps for everything on both units and never toggle back to the topo maps.
So my recommendation would be to buy the 550 as is, then decide if you need another map.
On the Left Side of the Road...12/26/2009 at 3:45 pm #1911129@hogrod wrote:
I was wondering if anyone had tried making custom maps for their oregon? check out the info here, looks pretty amazing.
I still use a 60Cx & always switch between the two, having both on one would be very nice!
On the Oregon, youcan customize the data fields on the map screen. Ilike to use the “pointer” as one data field, and the “distance to end” on the other data field. The pointer works like a minii compass.
12/26/2009 at 7:21 pm #1911130@lostby7 wrote:
More updates came out (again) last night for the Garmin Oregon series. I really like this update as the unit now shows the cache type icon on the list of closest caches along with the cache names….very cool.
Thanks for the alert to this update, it makes the Oregon just about perfect in my book.
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