I have a garmin 60cx I think is the model #, it works good, but you can get a $100 at wally world and it will do the same. It really depends on what all you plan on doing with it.
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Looking for a good hand held GPS to mark fishing spots. Anyone have any advice?
I have a garmin 60cx I think is the model #, it works good, but you can get a $100 at wally world and it will do the same. It really depends on what all you plan on doing with it.
GO BIG ORANGE !
I meant to behave, but there were just way too many other options available at the time.
IMO , you don't need a fancy one, I bought my etrex (yellow) used off ebay. I have 2 of them. Really simple to operate.
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Takeum Jigs
How accurate are these newer models? I had one I bought around 1999~2000, it was suppose to be a good one (at that time) and I was unable to find the same spot in a large parking lot with it, let alone a brush pile I had marked.
Will any be accurate enough to take me to the same brush pile time after time?
mine will get close enough you can throw your marker and fish around it and find your brush. sometimes it might be 10 or 15 foot off. the trick is keep at a steady speed until you get to the spot and throw your marker. when you get close and stop it goes crazy
kost plus crappie team
GPS accuracy is affected by several things, including the weather, tree cover, and the capability of your machine. Look for one that is WAAS-enabled. Another nice feature is the ability to transfer waypoints and trip tracks to/from your PC and work with them. Using this capability, you can reload your handheld with selected trip tracks from your best trips to a fishery. If you have the old trip track, you don't need waypoints as much. When you approach a BP, for example, you'll see the "yarn ball" appearance of the tracks from the old trips & can stay inside that area while your finder pinpoints the BP.
Triangulation is your friend.
Crappie bite twice a day. 15 minutes before I get there and 10 minutes after I leave.
The sheep live in fear of the wolf but in the end it's the shepherd that eats them.
The two loudest sounds are a gun that goes click when it is supposed to go bang and
a gun the goes bang when it is supposed to go click.
Agreed. Whenever you can get a set of shore marks to go along with your GPS waypoints, that's even better. You use the GPS to get close and the marks to hit the spot exactly. Unfortunately, many places lack the stand-out features needed for triangulation.
Hater- I forgot to mention buoyancy as another desirable feature. My GPSmap 76 is waterproof & it floats. It's never been over the side, but once I found it floating in the minnow bucket! By comparison, a friend's handheld GPS drowned in a sudden cloudburst. We made it back to the truck & sat out the 20 min. storm, but the 2" of rain in the bottom of my boat killed his non-waterproof GPS.