any thoughts on magellan?

half_empty1

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hi all,
magellan are bringing a new range of the explorist models out.

http://www.magellangps.com/en/products/product.asp?PRODID=1073

this looks like the only choice, apart from the magellan meridian of course. so will garmin bring out a 2610 with a battery or a quest that takes compact flash or sd cards, im not rich enough to buy both :(

what do ya think to the magellan brand?
 
everyone here buys garmin

thats cos everyone likes to fit in.

can't have anything different - you're not allowed to - its the 'rules'

same suits - same earphones - same helmets - same accessories.

thats the rules ;)
 

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Fitting In ( Magellan)

LOL

Brilliant picture just what I needed on a cold rainy night .
Thumbs up:: :bounce1

Dan
 
Have to say the Explorist 600 looks to fill most things. I like the Quest but the lack of expandanble memory is putting me off. I remember a comment that Paneuropean said about the data for the maps will only get bigger and so the lack of expansion could make your unit redundant in no time. I like the size of the Quest and guess the 600 is a similar size. any ideas on when a European version is likely?

Lunsarboy
 
hopefully it will be sometime late feb or march, global pos syst have a small right up, lets hope they stock them when they come out.

http://www.globalpositioningsystems.co.uk/news_article.php?article_id=155

the advantage over the magellan meridian colour is that the explorist uses USB not serial cable for data transfer and with the explorist having a li-ion battery there should be no battery compartment for water to get in. some reviews i on the meridian said they couldnt seem to get it closed properly and thought it would be poss for water to get in.
 
Am i correct in thinking it would not matter if you bought the US version as the Mapsend Directroute software does not come with the unit anyway and is an optional extra. So could you not buy a US version and install Directroute Europe on it. I am new to GPS and have never used one. I know from this forum that on Garmin units this can be an issue due to the basemap can anyone say if the Magellan's are the same?

Lunsarboy
 
not too sure myself about basemap issues with magellans, or what map software if any it will come with once its been released for sale. just gonna have to wait and see for the moment.
 
First off I have no experience of Magellans European mapping.

In the US and Australia the Magellan mapping is 4-5 times as big as Garmins mapping for the same area (and similar level of detail).

With the Meridians and eXplorists you can load more than one map but you need to load them in 64 MB segments. You can only display one segment at a time and when you move onto the next segment you need to manually change to that map.

For DirectRoute (equivalent of Garmins auto-routing products - City Navigator or City Select) this means that your start and finish points of the route must be on the same 64 MB map segment.

Search functionality in the enabled segment is not as useful as Garmins either.

In some countries Magellan has more detailed mapping than Garmin
ie Canada and Australia
 
Not having used a GPS to date I have no real idea how much data 64mb will hold but it soounds pretty crap if you can have a map of all Europe but only have limited access to start and finish points or I guess it would mean you have to create several start/stop routes of 64mb each and keep changing. If this is the case with the Explorist 600 then it has just gone down a few rungs on the ladder and maybe explains why so many users here have Garmin units. Looks like I have much more learning to do before choosing anything.

Lunsarboy
 
just found this on adventure rider

"The maximum region size in Mapsend DirectRoute can be changed. Edit the mapsend.ini file in \Program Files\Mapsend\Mapsend DirectRoute NA\. Under [DEVICE_DEFAULTS] there is a listing Conv_Memory_Size=65???. Change the 65??? to a larger number. 256000 works but takes quite a few hours to process the region with points of interest. I tried 512000 but it crashed my machine trying to process the region. I have a 512 MB card with two 256MB regions on it. This covers the entire east coast of the US."

so if the explorist 600 still has the same limitation of saying 64mb max map size, it is poss to make it bigger.
 
Yes you can up the map size but it is not recommended.
Screen redraw time goes rapidly downhill.
The 256MB quoted about seems improbable - read minutes to redraw

Not sure about the eXplorist 600, the 400/500/600 seem quite different (on paper) to the 100/200/300.
I suspect it is a Magellan architectual limit (ie they designed their firmware that way)
 
I honestly think the memory 'problem' is being overstated and people might be put off without good reason.

I've just looked on my quest and it has the entire UK, Ireland and Northern France maps on it.....

As soon as you go outside the main countries of europe, you lose full street mapping nyway, so unless I was doing a full tour of all of the UK and Ireland, then going further than Northern France as well, I can't see me running out of space anyway.

More realistically, I'd do a tour from say Here, down across France into the mountains and down into Italy or somewhere similar......or maybe down into Spain and across into Morocco.

The Quest will hold those routes no problem.......plus I can go further then on worldmap which it'll also hold.

How many people here can honestly say they're likely to cover more miles around the fully covered areas of Europe than the Quest can hold in one go anyway???

(PS as a last resort I take my laptop away anyway, so I can d/load all my pics and write stuff.......so it's not a problem ;) )
 
Ferdinand Magellan

(Portuguese Fernão Magalhaes).

The first circumnavigator of the real world; born about 1480 at Saborosa in Villa Real, Province of Traz os Montes, Portugal; died during his voyage of discovery on the Island of Mactan in the Philippines, 27 April 1521.

He was the son of Pedro Ruy de Magalhaes, mayor of the town, and of Alda de Mezquita. He was brought up at the Court of Portugal and learned astronomy and the nautical sciences under good teachers, among whom may have been Martin Behaim. These studies filled him at an early age with enthusiasm for the great voyages of discovery which were being made at that period.

In 1505, he took part in the expedition of Francisco d'Almeida, which was equipped to establish the Portuguese viceroyalty in India, and in 1511 he performed important services in the Portuguese conquest of Malacca. He returned home in 1512 and took part in the Portuguese expedition to Morocco, where he was severely wounded. On account of a personal disagreement with the commander-in-chief, he left the army without permission. This and an unfavourable report that had been made upon him by Almeida led to his disgrace with the king.

Condemned to inactivity and checked in his desire for personal distinction, he once more devoted himself to studies and projects to which he was mainly stimulated by the reports of the recently discovered Moluccas sent by his friend Serrão. Serrão so greatly exaggerated the distance of the Moluccas to the east of Malacca that the islands appeared to lie within the half of the world granted by the pope to Spain. Magellan therefore resolved to seek the Moluccas by sailing to the west around South America. As he could not hope to arouse interest for the carrying out of his plans in Portugal, and was himself, moreover misjudged and ignored, he renounced his nationality and offered his services to Spain. He received much aid from Diego Barbosa, warden of the castle of Seville, whose daughter he married, and from the influential Juan de Aranda, agent of the Indian office, who at once desired to claim the Moluccas for Spain. King Charles I of Spain (afterwards the Emperor Charles V) gave his consent as early as 22 March 1518, being largely influenced to do this by the advice of Cardinal Juan Rodriguez de Fonseca. The king made an agreement with Magellan which settled the different shares of ownership in the new discoveries, and the rewards to be granted the discoverer, and appointed him commander of the fleet. This fleet consisted of five vessels granted by the government; two 130 tons each, two of 90 tons each and one of 60 tons. They were provisioned for 234 persons for two years. Magellan commanded the chief ship, the Trinidad; Juan de Cartagena, the San Antonio; Gaspar de Quesada, the Conception; Luis de Mendoza, the Victoria; Juan Serrano, the Santiago. The expedition also included Duarte Barbosa, Barbosa's nephew, the cosmographer Andrés de San Martín, and the Italian Antonio Pigafetta of Vicenza, to whom the account of the voyage is due.

Good Bloke
 


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