Hey Marko and Netter's,

I have the High Res database in my AnywhereMap PDA.  It has all roads,
rivers, lakes, airports, etc.  The XP version for my tablet also had the
High Res database.  The additional database files have to be downloaded
from AWM's website and installed.  They are good size files but have
tons of stuff.  I had a learning curve initially but now really like it.
There are a number of settings in the software you have to set to
display the features you want. I can display airways, approach plates,
VORs with freq's, ATIS, and elevation. 

I really like the 396 but like others, am hesitant to spend the $2500+
to get it.  I'm with Mark on the GPS receiver. I use my Bluetooth
wireless for the antennae to eliminate wires and it works great.  My
receiver is from an auto gps system.  I bought the software and GPS
antennae for $200. It works just fine with the AWM. I have been From
California to Mt. Vernon, Ohio, down to Alabama and back with it without
a problem. I definitely needed a reliable GPS with a solid database to
get me through some of the weather on these trips.

Regards,

Steve Glover
KR-2 N902G
AJO, Ca
<kr...@cox.net>


-----Original Message-----
From: krnet-boun...@mylist.net [mailto:krnet-boun...@mylist.net] On
Behalf Of Mark Langford
Sent: Friday, November 18, 2005 4:55 AM
To: KRnet
Subject: Re: KR> GPS


Dan Heath wrote:

> Before you decide what to get, you should check out this one. I am 
> only posting this for you to have another option. 
> http://anywheremap.com/

AnywhereMap is famous for being the cat's meow for handheld PDAs, and
for 
that purpose, I'm sure it's great.  But in a PDA you have a teeny little

screen that's hard to see (but it's far better than nothing), so
AnywhereMap 
is fairly low resolution.  For example, due to limited memory of PDAs,
the 
database has no rivers, only big lakes, and cities are rather blocky,
with 
only major highways shown.

They now have what they call AnywhereMap XP, designed for running on 
notebooks, tablets, and laptops, which I ASSumed was a higher resolution

version for Windows based computers.  While the display is somewhat
higher 
resolution, it uses the same low res database, so you get no rivers.  I 
noticed this in about 5 seconds as I looked for Huntsville on their US
map. 
I had a hard time finding it because the Tennessee river was missing!
So I 
punched in M38, my home airport, and it said "not in database".  Now
that 
worries me.  What if you're flying along and your crankshaft breaks, and
you 
push the "nearest airport" button, and the one right under you doesn't 
happen to be in the database?  Not a good thing.  And it turns out that
many 
of the features of the PDA version aren't yet implemented in the XP
version, 
and the "help" files just plain don't work. Given that the instruction 
manual is about 10 pages long, help files would be helpful!   I read 
complaints on the web that the stuff wasn't ready for prime time, but
since 
they were a year or so old, I figured it was fixed by now.  It's not.

Couple that with the fact that they sold me a Haicom GPS that you could
buy 
for $100 anywhere else, for $250 (it had an AnywhereMap sticker stuck to
the 
other side, which made it more valuable, I guess), and I was pretty 
disgusted with my purchase.  It went back in the box and back to them
two 
weeks ago, and I'm still waiting for them to credit my credit card
account.

This stuff is fine for PDA's (so I'm told), but don't think you'll be
happy 
with the laptop version.

I haven't mentioned what I'm using yet, because I haven't fully tested
it 
and can't swear by it, but I'll give a full report when I do.  Basically

it's a TPad 800 remote display,  which is daylight readable, and 6" wide
by 
9" tall, mounted to the panel, dead center and right in front of my
face. 
It's so tall it only misses the canopy by half an inch.  It's hooked to
my 
laptop, which is running Flightprep's "Chart Case" (supported by KRnet's
own 
John Bouyeau), which is pretty awsome stuff.  You have various modes of 
moving map, including overlayed on top of the current sectional.  All of

this is connected to a $100 Garmin 18 USB GPS plugged into the laptop,
which 
came with free street mapping GPS software, so I can also use the laptop
in 
the car on trips.  The beauty of this system is that it cost me $1400
(no, 
that's not the beautiful part), but that when it becomes obsolete, I
don't 
have to go out and buy another $2500 GPS box, I just buy new software.
But 
ChartCase has regular updates, so that's not going to happen anytime
soon. 
I basically have a full powered computer sitting on my panel.  I carry a

laptop anyway to collect EIS (Engine Information System) data anyway, so
I 
might as well use it.  Next improvement will be to replace the laptop
with a 
"car PC", a little box that's about $300, and is a full-featured PC set
up 
for 12V.  I'll have to buy an "industrial hard drive" that is altitude 
compensated (hard drives tend to crash over 10,000'), which will drive
the 
price to $600, but it's smaller and more rugged than the laptop, and can
be 
permanently mounted in the plane.  So I've got $2500 in a killer huge
screen 
color  GPS setup, that's not going obsolete anytime soon, a far better
value 
for my money than a Garmin 396.  Oh, and it does weather and terrain too

(although I'm not up for the $30 a month WX weather subscription yet).
Not 
as good a price as what Mark Jones has (that's hard to beat), but with 
better functionality and readability (although admittedly not 25x more 
functionality or readability!).

Another alternative is a tablet PC.  There are a couple (more on that
later) 
that are daylight readable, but  they are just plain bigger than will
fit on 
my panel.  I'll do a full report on this system when I have it up and 
running, but so far, the flight planning and GPS stuff works great!

Mark Langford, Huntsville, Alabama
see KR2S project N56ML at http://home.hiwaay.net/~langford email to
N56ML "at" hiwaay.net 


_______________________________________
Search the KRnet Archives at http://www.maddyhome.com/krsrch/index.jsp
to UNsubscribe from KRnet, send a message to krnet-le...@mylist.net
please see other KRnet info at http://www.krnet.org/info.html



Reply via email to