Yeah, but @rsed doing that, to still have a massive phone mounted on my bike with a battery that gets drained in no time...You don`t need a signal to use GPS if you pre load the maps for the area onto your phone before you go
Yeah, but @rsed doing that, to still have a massive phone mounted on my bike with a battery that gets drained in no time...You don`t need a signal to use GPS if you pre load the maps for the area onto your phone before you go
Agreed that`s why I got the Garmin 800 my reply was just regarding your post about no signal might help others who use phones.Yeah, but @rsed doing that, to still have a massive phone mounted on my bike with a battery that gets drained in no time...
You daft sodSo am I and im not even going![]()
Just to add my 2p worth . The Garmin edge 500 also has the breadcrumb trail that beeps at you for no reason and has you going up and down the road when you where already going the right way
I got lost yesterday and used my iphone to pinpoint where I was , locate the roads I needed and then I was set to go again . No need to keep it running unless you have a very bad memory .
I was thinking of upgrading to the 800 as it has maps but are the maps any good ? Can you expand them to see road names and the local area like on the iphone ?[/QUOTE]
You can expand the map a bit and see road names but not as much as on the iphone.
Just to add my 2p worth . The Garmin edge 500 also has the breadcrumb trail that beeps at you for no reason and has you going up and down the road when you where already going the right way
I got lost yesterday and used my iphone to pinpoint where I was , locate the roads I needed and then I was set to go again . No need to keep it running unless you have a very bad memory .
I was thinking of upgrading to the 800 as it has maps but are the maps any good ? Can you expand them to see road names and the local area like on the iphone ?
Nothing wrong with the Brytons used a 20 and 35 both easy to use, however the breadcrumb on the 500 (so I presume the 200) are much easier to use, just create a route download this as a tcx course and copy to the newfiles folder on the garmin unit, once you turn it on it then converts it to a course file (which will then be found in the course folder), load this as the course you want to do and just follow the breadcrumb trial, the 500 warned you if off course (though it did have a habit of doing this on a straight road with open fields if the gps signal was off).Ahh so that's what a breadcrumb trail looks like! Take it you don't get to search local points of interest with the 200 though? I don't need all the stuff on 800/810, so don't really want to spend a wedge on things I don't need. Ease of use would be good so I'll give the Bryton's a miss.