I have said many times before....
I will carry on (to) spend more time moaning on.
Is what you meant

I have said many times before....
I will carry on (to) spend more time moaning on.

I will carry on (to) spend more time moaning on.
Is what you meant![]()
Lighten up, old boy. You'll blow a gasket![]()
It can take literally hours to get a trip off my satnav and show it in Basecamp and then sometimes trying to colour different days in different colours can remove parts of the trip, they just disappear. I am sure it can do wonderful things, the problem is that it is plain user unfriendly.
and then sometimes trying to colour different days in different colours can remove parts of the trip, they just disappear.
Whilst Basil Fawlty fumes, let's see if we can help you out.
You have to remember that young Wapping only uses Basecamp 'cos he has little choice since he has one of those excellent Apple thingies..I do admire you and others for coming to grips with Basecamp
You have to remember that young Wapping only uses Basecamp 'cos he has little choice since he has one of those excellent Apple thingies..
When he was able to use Mapsource he loved it.. I'm fortunate, I'm able (and can) use both programs, but do honestly prefer Mapsource, finding it much quicker and a whole lot less pissing about with clicking on various icons to achieve a result.
Careful, otherwise you might end up on the naughty step like me.
John
I think the issue comes when advising folk who are new to Garmin to forget about Basecamp as it is too different/too difficult/doesn't work/etc etc. Sure, you can still make routes in Mapsource and transfer them to latest generation Garmin satnavs but irritating things happen if you do. A while back on the Zumo forums the Americans worked themselves into a frenzy over the 'black flags' that appeared at shaping points, and the fact that shaping points were announced like upcoming turns in the Zumo 550 - and it's because the routes were created in Mapsource, and that's the way it shows shaping points. In Basecamp you have the facility to firstly check which points will be announced and then to turn off the announcement if it isn't going to be useful.
If someone is new to Garmin then they're best advised to invest their time learning Basecamp. Why bother to learn Mapsource when it became unsupported years ago? It takes the same amount of time to plot a route in Basecamp as it does in Mapsource, and to my mind it is easier in some respects - you can use the mouse scroll wheel to zoom in and out, and the alt key plus 'hand' to insert a shaping point. Moreover, Basecamp has one massive advantage over Mapsource: you can have all of your routes, tracks and waypoints in one database, instantly available. No more buggering about opening multiple instances of Mapsource in order to cut and paste sections of route/waypoint/tracks for use on a new journey.
So what's not to like? I started using Mapsource in 2006 with a Quest and became pretty good with it. I stuck with Mapsource when I had a 550 but when that was replaced with a 220 I realised that it was time to move to Basecamp. I'm now using a Nav V and I'm convinced that Basecamp is the right choice from reading all the posts on here from people that have problems with Nav Vs or 590s or 340s or whatever, as most of the time they're creating routes in Tyre or Mapsource or some other app. Then some other dinosaur will appear to explain how to get around these problems using some convoluted method simply to avoid putting a couple of hours of effort into understanding Basecamp.
Try it out, persevere - not everything that is new is crap.
I think the issue comes when advising folk who are new to Garmin to forget about Basecamp as it is too different/too difficult/doesn't work/etc etc. Sure, you can still make routes in Mapsource and transfer them to latest generation Garmin satnavs but irritating things happen if you do. A while back on the Zumo forums some Americans worked themselves into a frenzy over the 'black flags' that appeared at shaping points, and the fact that shaping points were announced like upcoming turns in the Zumo 550 - and it's because the routes were created in Mapsource, and that's the way it shows shaping points. In Basecamp you have the facility to firstly check which points will be announced and then to turn off the announcement if it isn't going to be useful.
If someone is new to Garmin then they're best advised to invest their time learning Basecamp. Why bother to learn Mapsource when it became unsupported years ago? It takes the same amount of time to plot a route in Basecamp as it does in Mapsource, and to my mind it is easier in some respects - you can use the mouse scroll wheel to zoom in and out, and the alt key plus 'hand' to insert a shaping point. Moreover, Basecamp has one massive advantage over Mapsource: you can have all of your routes, tracks and waypoints in one database, instantly available. No more buggering about opening multiple instances of Mapsource in order to cut and paste sections of route/waypoint/tracks for use on a new journey.
So what's not to like? I started using Mapsource in 2006 with a Quest and became pretty good with it. I stuck with Mapsource when I had a 550 but when that was replaced with a 220 I realised that it was time to move to Basecamp. I'm now using a Nav V and I'm convinced that Basecamp is the right choice from reading all the posts on here from people that have problems with Nav Vs or 590s or 340s or whatever, as most of the time they're creating routes in Tyre or Mapsource or some other app. Then some other dinosaur will appear to explain how to get around these problems using some convoluted method simply to avoid putting a couple of hours of effort into understanding Basecamp.
Try it out, persevere - not everything that is new is crap.
I think the issue comes when advising folk who are new to Garmin to forget about Basecamp as it is too different/too difficult/doesn't work/etc etc....Then some other dinosaur will appear to explain how to get around these problems using some convoluted method simply to avoid putting a couple of hours of effort into understanding Basecamp... not everything that is new is crap.
whole lot less pissing about with clicking on various icons to achieve a result.
Hi All
Am i thick or is Garmin BaseCamp a pile of poo.
I am trying to add some routes to my Nav iv using BaseCamp but am having problems with the basics i.e finding Lavrio Port, think I found Lavrio bus station but no trace of the port, does it still exist ?.
When I enter Patras I cant find the Port in the dropdown list.
I tried entering the postcode and the address in greek all to no avail.
Is there an easy way of creating a route on a computer and transferring it to the navigator
See the post above yours..Use Bing Maps in conjunction with Basecamp and all becomes real easy.....
in Bing maps type in your target destination (either name / place / post code / town etc etc
>press enter and it creates a location flag on the map
>right click on the location flag
>choose option "Copy" from the coordinates section
>Go to Basecamp and click "Find" from the top menu bar
>click "locate Coordinates" (the bottom option)
>Highlight the coordinates in the box so it all goes blue and then right click and "Paste" your coordinates over from your clipboard
>Click "Recentre" - you can Skip this stage if you want and go straight to next stage
>Click Create Waypoint
> now right click the waypoint coordinates and rename it whatever you want and you can change the symbol - Press enter
NOW THE WAYPOINT IS SAVED IN BASECAMP AS WHATEVER YOU HAVE NAMED IT AS WITH WHATEVER ICON YOU CHOOSE AND CAN NOW BE USED TO CREATE A ROUTE FROM THE ROUTING TOOL.
SIMPLE.
Rik