Paul Wakefield said:
Question: When it recalculates, is it just to the next via point or does it recalculate the whole route (as the preferences in Mapsource and the unit may be different)?
Hi Paul:
The last time I looked into this in any detail was about 3 years ago, just when the 26xx series of GPSRs was coming out to replace the StreetPilot III as the new top of the line units.
The way things worked back then was as follows:
1) The GPSR would make up to three 'quick recalculations' that were intended to get you back onto the existing route line in the shortest possible distance - in other words, to re-capture your route without making any changes to your route.
2) If it appeared to the GPSR that you were trying to get back onto the original route (i.e. you were following the prompts), the GPSR would continue to route you back onto the original route without modifying it.
3) If the GPSR made its three 'quick recalculations' and you ignored the prompts provided three times in a row, it would then do a full recalculation of the route. The full recalculation would create a new route (from scratch) to get you to the
next waypoint along your stored route. However, if you were very close to passing abeam the 'next waypoint', you might get routed to the subsequent waypoint along your route, rather than to the 'next' one.
Again - that was how it worked several years ago. Processing power has increased by a factor of 10 since then, so it is possible that the GPSR may no longer do the three 'quick recalculations' any more. The motivation behind the 'quick recalculation' was to speed up the route recalculation process - something that may no longer be a concern with the super-fast processors in the 27xx and 28xx series.
In any case, intermediate waypoints that you create in MapSource by dragging your route line around are treated with the same respect as intermediate waypoints that you create manually by making a waypoint and including it in your route. So, you don't have to worry about the GPSR discarding your point to point preferences when it recalculates. As long as you have not already passed abeam an intermediate point, the GPSR will try to take you to the intermediate point when it does the recalculations.
Hope this helps.
By the way... many years ago, the lack of processing power (recalculation power) was actually a benefit to rally organizers, because the GPSRs would take a very methodological approach to route recalculation, and never get 'creative' about trying to get the rider to the destination faster. Nowadays, the GPSR route software is a lot more sophisticated, and the device itself can recalculate much faster. This could, I suppose, have unwanted effects for those who are constructing rallies. If you find that the GPSR is being 'too clever' about recalculating rally routes, and you can't find a way of disabling the automatic recalculation feature, let us know, and maybe the software engineers can provide us with a 'rally' setting, which would tell the GPSR to not ever change the course of the pre-programmed route, under any circumstances. In other words, only do recalculations to get the rider back onto the existing route, never change the existing route.
As most of the regulars here know, some of the Garmin software engineers are moto riders, and they would understand exactly what we were asking for, if it ever becomes necessary to ask for it. I just don't know if the GPSR will handle rallies the way we want right now (the 'old' way), because I don't ride in rallies myself.
Michael