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What do you need in a GPS? A navigation expert helps you decide.
By Blake Miller
Recently, I was in a local and large sporting goods store and watched a clerk recommend a very expensive and complex Global Positioning System receiver to an elderly gentleman. The prospective customer simply wanted a GPS that would “get him back to the rig,” yet the clerk kept pushing the latest, high-tech, touch screen – and very expensive – GPS.
These are basic navigation tools: compass, emergency whistle, map and GPS. Don’t leave home without any of them.
The customer would have been satisfied with a basic starter model, and it would have served him very well. Instead, he went from prospective customer status, to disgruntled prospective customer and left the store very frustrated. He didn’t buy anything.
Buying your first GPS is like shopping for your first car. In a vehicle, you want it to provide transportation from Point A to Point B. In a GPS, you also want it to take you from Point A to Point B. There are many models that will fill your needs exactly, but before you put the money down, you need to shop intelligently.
Here is what you need to know:
Start with a quick education on common GPS terms, and why they’re important.
Every GPS has these basic features. All the rest are bells and whistles. And it will be up to you to determine which ones are important.
For example, I like a GPS with a Barometric altimeter. I use that function to monitor atmospheric pressure at high elevations; when the pressure drops I look for cover. An altimeter can also be used to help locate where you are on topograqphical maps. For example, if you know your location is where a stream crosses a elevation line on a map, then you can be sure where you are.
When looking for your first GPS receiver consider the following:
In the store, pick up the receiver, look at the controls and hold it as you would when using it. Ask yourself:
Once you buy a GPS, keep fresh batteries in it. Don’t put it in the closet, or store it in your survivl kit. Take it out and use it; now. You can’t break it, and when you practice with your GPS, you are practicing one of your wilderness survival land navigation skills.
Visit the manufacture’s web site once every six months or so. The manufactures frequently offer free up-grades allowing the GPS’s internal software to run more efficiently. It is usually a simple download to make your GPS current.
A good way to learn is to take a GPS class where you will learn the basics and how your receiver works. Check with your local Community College’s continuing education program or at sporting goods stores to see if they offer classes.
And don’t forget: a GPS is no substitute for a map and a quality compass and the knowledge of how to use them. The most expensive GPS on the market is only as good as its batteries. Anything electronic can fail and they do so at the most inconvenient time!
About Blake Miller:
Blake Miller has made a career out of staying found and knowing where he is at all times. His formal navigation training began when he joined the U.S. Navy in 1973. He served as an officer aboard several Navy ships over his twenty-year career; many of those tours included the duty of Navigator. Blake began working with satellite navigation systems at sea in 1976, culminating with the then-new Global Positioning Systems aboard the Battleship WISCONSIN in early 1990.
In 1998 Blake started Outdoor Quest, a business dedicated to backcountry navigation and wilderness survival. Blake has taught classes to wild land firefighters, state agency staffs, Search and Rescue team members, hunters, hikers, skiers, fishermen and equestrians. He regularly teaches classes through the Community Education programs at Central Oregon (Bend) and Chemeketa (Salem, OR) Community Colleges.
As a volunteer, Blake teaches navigation and survival classes through the Becoming an Outdoor Woman (B0W) program, to students in the local school district, and conservation groups. He is a member of a Search and Rescue team.
Contact Information:
Phone: 541 280 0573
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.outdoorquest.biz
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