Garfieldus
Guest
This post is to let gsers know some of the limitations of the Streetpilot III and may help you avoid making the same mistake I made.
I've been using a Garmin III+ since 1998. In August 2003 I bought a GArmin Streetpilot III - a stunning piece of kit and it does exactly what it says on the box but I made a big mistake. I assumed it would do what the III+ did and more (a lot more) - wrong.
I like to switch to my country's national grid (rather than Lat/Lon) and use this in conjunction with OS maps (Ireland). I also need to track and record/save routes for future retracing and to share with other people. Neither of these two vital (to me) tasks can be done with the SPIII.
Some time ago I spoke with a very knowledgeable guy on the Micapeak gs list and I quote from him below (in red).........
If you understand the value of a GPS, the ONLY one to buy is a Garmin 176 (monochrome) or 176C (color, with reduced readability in high-level ambient light conditions). Garmin is the only company I'm aware of that has mapping software for the world (outdated as it is). Their much-touted StreetPilot (also sold as the BMW Navigator) cannot store tracks - which are invaluable if you want to document your ride, or, duplicate a ride or send tracks to a friend. The GPS V is nice, but, has a small display, and a limited number of trackpoints per track. For a motorcycle, the 176-series is the best combination of display area, resolution, processor speed, and overall capability. I wouldn't even consider buying anything else. However, the current 176 does not do auto-routing if that's important to you. For me, this is moot, as most of the places I ride and need a GPS for navigation are auto-routable anyway (Garmin's auto-routing is only enabled via their "Navigator" or "Select" software for North America and Western Europe).
For what it's worth, I've heard rumors of a revised version of the 176 due out early next year, the Garmin GPS MAP 276. Rumored to have a better display, and, most important, uses PC Card flash memory, as opposed to the current proprietary Garmin data card. May also have USB interface, instead of the brutally slow and outdated serial RS232C. Also rumored to have autorouting capability.
After reading the above I've waited until now to get a Garmin 276C and just anhour ago got a message from www.sportextreme.com that they're shipping today.
Incidentally it _does_ have autorouting. I'll let you know how I get on.
Garfieldus
I've been using a Garmin III+ since 1998. In August 2003 I bought a GArmin Streetpilot III - a stunning piece of kit and it does exactly what it says on the box but I made a big mistake. I assumed it would do what the III+ did and more (a lot more) - wrong.
I like to switch to my country's national grid (rather than Lat/Lon) and use this in conjunction with OS maps (Ireland). I also need to track and record/save routes for future retracing and to share with other people. Neither of these two vital (to me) tasks can be done with the SPIII.
Some time ago I spoke with a very knowledgeable guy on the Micapeak gs list and I quote from him below (in red).........
If you understand the value of a GPS, the ONLY one to buy is a Garmin 176 (monochrome) or 176C (color, with reduced readability in high-level ambient light conditions). Garmin is the only company I'm aware of that has mapping software for the world (outdated as it is). Their much-touted StreetPilot (also sold as the BMW Navigator) cannot store tracks - which are invaluable if you want to document your ride, or, duplicate a ride or send tracks to a friend. The GPS V is nice, but, has a small display, and a limited number of trackpoints per track. For a motorcycle, the 176-series is the best combination of display area, resolution, processor speed, and overall capability. I wouldn't even consider buying anything else. However, the current 176 does not do auto-routing if that's important to you. For me, this is moot, as most of the places I ride and need a GPS for navigation are auto-routable anyway (Garmin's auto-routing is only enabled via their "Navigator" or "Select" software for North America and Western Europe).
For what it's worth, I've heard rumors of a revised version of the 176 due out early next year, the Garmin GPS MAP 276. Rumored to have a better display, and, most important, uses PC Card flash memory, as opposed to the current proprietary Garmin data card. May also have USB interface, instead of the brutally slow and outdated serial RS232C. Also rumored to have autorouting capability.
After reading the above I've waited until now to get a Garmin 276C and just anhour ago got a message from www.sportextreme.com that they're shipping today.
Incidentally it _does_ have autorouting. I'll let you know how I get on.
Garfieldus

