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HumminBird 383c Combo locator/gps?
Evidently I won one in a Bass & Walleye Boats Magazine contest. I've looked them up on the Humminbird website, but I don't know anyone that has one to see how they like it. -- Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
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On Sat, 22 Mar 2008 19:52:28 -0500, "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers"
wrote: HumminBird 383c Combo locator/gps? Evidently I won one in a Bass & Walleye Boats Magazine contest. I've looked them up on the Humminbird website, but I don't know anyone that has one to see how they like it. I haven't used one. However, I HAVE been doing a bunch of comparative legwork, looking for a new unit for Dad. I saw the 383 at my local Bass Pro, alongside many other units, both from HB and other mfgrs. The color screen is a BIG PLUS in that the display is readily visible from almost any angle, in all lighting conditions. Have fun with your new unit! -- Calling an Illegal Alien an "Undocumented Worker" is like calling a Crack Dealer an "Unlicensed Pharmacist" |
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wrote in message
... On Sat, 22 Mar 2008 19:52:28 -0500, "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote: HumminBird 383c Combo locator/gps? Evidently I won one in a Bass & Walleye Boats Magazine contest. I've looked them up on the Humminbird website, but I don't know anyone that has one to see how they like it. I haven't used one. However, I HAVE been doing a bunch of comparative legwork, looking for a new unit for Dad. I saw the 383 at my local Bass Pro, alongside many other units, both from HB and other mfgrs. The color screen is a BIG PLUS in that the display is readily visible from almost any angle, in all lighting conditions. Have fun with your new unit! Sounds like a fun new toy. I've been a fan of Garmin GPS map units for a while now, but my BassCat came with a Lowarance GPS map at the console. The first thing I noticed is that the Lowrance unit seemed to lock onto location much quicker. What has this got to do with your Humminbird you might ask. LOL. The second thing I noticed was theat the base map for the Lowrance was next to useless, while the base map for the Garmin included many standard features and locations. The Mapcreate software that came with the Lowrance made the unit useable, but when I loaded all the local data it was only marginally better than the base map that came preloaded on the Garmin units. I loaded topo maps that came with my Garmins, and they were better, but for real world work the Garmin Roads & Recreation map extras were what I really needed to be useful. Nothing like that was available for Lowrance. In fact finding any additional map info for my areas was impossible for Lowrance. Their Fishing Hotspots was next to useless in my hoime region. It actually reduced map data. (Not bad for Lake Mead though). Anyway... I suspect the usefulness of any GPS map unit will in part depend on both your own knowledge of the area, the quality of map data available, and the ease of installing map data. Hopefully Humminbird included some decent map data with the unit, and its easy to load. P.S. I found my Garmins to be both easy and awkward to load map data onto. I hook them to a serial port on my PC and the software is almost intuitive to use. I can upload the field data like waypoints from the unit, I can set my own waypoints, and then I can download them all to the unit. Its pretty easy. Transferring map data is about the same. The awkward part is that I have to remove the unit from the boat and bring it into my computer. The Lowrance units use a card, and have a reader available for the card, but the software is cludgy and difficult to use in my opinion. On the water they are both pretty easy to set, use, set waypoints, save tracks, etc. When water levels are fluctuating, and I plan to fish a way up river in a tournament I like to go out the day before and save a safe trace on my GPS. Paired with knowledge of the area that allows to me to run WOT all the way to my first spot with only minor fear of wasting part of my morning dragging the boat off a sandbar. If you fish lakes with rock bars and submerged rock islands that type of thing could be very useful for you Steve. If you locate good fish you can of course save the location to make it easy to take a client to the spot, but on your way back you should be able to save a trace, and possibley save some waypoints so that you can quickly and safely take a client directly to the spot. It sounds like it could be a fun new toy and possibley a good new tool depending on some of the things I mentioned. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
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On Sun, 23 Mar 2008 09:59:35 -0700, "Bob La Londe"
wrote: wrote in message .. . On Sat, 22 Mar 2008 19:52:28 -0500, "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote: HumminBird 383c Combo locator/gps? Evidently I won one in a Bass & Walleye Boats Magazine contest. I've looked them up on the Humminbird website, but I don't know anyone that has one to see how they like it. I haven't used one. However, I HAVE been doing a bunch of comparative legwork, looking for a new unit for Dad. I saw the 383 at my local Bass Pro, alongside many other units, both from HB and other mfgrs. The color screen is a BIG PLUS in that the display is readily visible from almost any angle, in all lighting conditions. Have fun with your new unit! Sounds like a fun new toy. I've been a fan of Garmin GPS map units for a while now, but my BassCat came with a Lowarance GPS map at the console. The first thing I noticed is that the Lowrance unit seemed to lock onto location much quicker. What has this got to do with your Humminbird you might ask. LOL. The second thing I noticed was theat the base map for the Lowrance was next to useless, while the base map for the Garmin included many standard features and locations. The Mapcreate software that came with the Lowrance made the unit useable, but when I loaded all the local data it was only marginally better than the base map that came preloaded on the Garmin units. I loaded topo maps that came with my Garmins, and they were better, but for real world work the Garmin Roads & Recreation map extras were what I really needed to be useful. Nothing like that was available for Lowrance. In fact finding any additional map info for my areas was impossible for Lowrance. Their Fishing Hotspots was next to useless in my hoime region. It actually reduced map data. (Not bad for Lake Mead though). Anyway... I suspect the usefulness of any GPS map unit will in part depend on both your own knowledge of the area, the quality of map data available, and the ease of installing map data. Hopefully Humminbird included some decent map data with the unit, and its easy to load. P.S. I found my Garmins to be both easy and awkward to load map data onto. I hook them to a serial port on my PC and the software is almost intuitive to use. I can upload the field data like waypoints from the unit, I can set my own waypoints, and then I can download them all to the unit. Its pretty easy. Transferring map data is about the same. The awkward part is that I have to remove the unit from the boat and bring it into my computer. The Lowrance units use a card, and have a reader available for the card, but the software is cludgy and difficult to use in my opinion. On the water they are both pretty easy to set, use, set waypoints, save tracks, etc. When water levels are fluctuating, and I plan to fish a way up river in a tournament I like to go out the day before and save a safe trace on my GPS. Paired with knowledge of the area that allows to me to run WOT all the way to my first spot with only minor fear of wasting part of my morning dragging the boat off a sandbar. If you fish lakes with rock bars and submerged rock islands that type of thing could be very useful for you Steve. If you locate good fish you can of course save the location to make it easy to take a client to the spot, but on your way back you should be able to save a trace, and possibley save some waypoints so that you can quickly and safely take a client directly to the spot. It sounds like it could be a fun new toy and possibley a good new tool depending on some of the things I mentioned. I have found that the Lowrance systems seem to be overpriced. Many models from other makers with similar or more features, for much less $$$. When I asked the salesman at Bass Pro about the discrepancy, he simply stated that if I want a Lowrance, I gotta pay for the name. Bob, you mentioned Mead .... given that the lake has fallen about 100 feet in the past few years, I was wondering... How are the mapping features are keeping up with the ever-changing depths and shorelines??? -- Calling an Illegal Alien an "Undocumented Worker" is like calling a Crack Dealer an "Unlicensed Pharmacist" |
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wrote in message
... On Sun, 23 Mar 2008 09:59:35 -0700, "Bob La Londe" wrote: wrote in message .. . On Sat, 22 Mar 2008 19:52:28 -0500, "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote: HumminBird 383c Combo locator/gps? Evidently I won one in a Bass & Walleye Boats Magazine contest. I've looked them up on the Humminbird website, but I don't know anyone that has one to see how they like it. I haven't used one. However, I HAVE been doing a bunch of comparative legwork, looking for a new unit for Dad. I saw the 383 at my local Bass Pro, alongside many other units, both from HB and other mfgrs. The color screen is a BIG PLUS in that the display is readily visible from almost any angle, in all lighting conditions. Have fun with your new unit! Sounds like a fun new toy. I've been a fan of Garmin GPS map units for a while now, but my BassCat came with a Lowarance GPS map at the console. The first thing I noticed is that the Lowrance unit seemed to lock onto location much quicker. What has this got to do with your Humminbird you might ask. LOL. The second thing I noticed was theat the base map for the Lowrance was next to useless, while the base map for the Garmin included many standard features and locations. The Mapcreate software that came with the Lowrance made the unit useable, but when I loaded all the local data it was only marginally better than the base map that came preloaded on the Garmin units. I loaded topo maps that came with my Garmins, and they were better, but for real world work the Garmin Roads & Recreation map extras were what I really needed to be useful. Nothing like that was available for Lowrance. In fact finding any additional map info for my areas was impossible for Lowrance. Their Fishing Hotspots was next to useless in my hoime region. It actually reduced map data. (Not bad for Lake Mead though). Anyway... I suspect the usefulness of any GPS map unit will in part depend on both your own knowledge of the area, the quality of map data available, and the ease of installing map data. Hopefully Humminbird included some decent map data with the unit, and its easy to load. P.S. I found my Garmins to be both easy and awkward to load map data onto. I hook them to a serial port on my PC and the software is almost intuitive to use. I can upload the field data like waypoints from the unit, I can set my own waypoints, and then I can download them all to the unit. Its pretty easy. Transferring map data is about the same. The awkward part is that I have to remove the unit from the boat and bring it into my computer. The Lowrance units use a card, and have a reader available for the card, but the software is cludgy and difficult to use in my opinion. On the water they are both pretty easy to set, use, set waypoints, save tracks, etc. When water levels are fluctuating, and I plan to fish a way up river in a tournament I like to go out the day before and save a safe trace on my GPS. Paired with knowledge of the area that allows to me to run WOT all the way to my first spot with only minor fear of wasting part of my morning dragging the boat off a sandbar. If you fish lakes with rock bars and submerged rock islands that type of thing could be very useful for you Steve. If you locate good fish you can of course save the location to make it easy to take a client to the spot, but on your way back you should be able to save a trace, and possibley save some waypoints so that you can quickly and safely take a client directly to the spot. It sounds like it could be a fun new toy and possibley a good new tool depending on some of the things I mentioned. I have found that the Lowrance systems seem to be overpriced. Many models from other makers with similar or more features, for much less $$$. When I asked the salesman at Bass Pro about the discrepancy, he simply stated that if I want a Lowrance, I gotta pay for the name. Bob, you mentioned Mead .... given that the lake has fallen about 100 feet in the past few years, I was wondering... How are the mapping features are keeping up with the ever-changing depths and shorelines??? I have not fished Lake Mead in 3 years, so I really don't know. -- Bob La Londe The guy who decides who we do business with. The Security Consultant PO Box 5720 Yuma, Az 85366 (928) 782-9765 ofc (928) 782-7873 fax Contractors License Numbers ROC103044 & ROC103047 |
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On Mar 22, 7:52*pm, "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" go-
wrote: HumminBird 383c Combo locator/gps? Evidently I won one in a Bass & Walleye Boats Magazine contest. *I've looked them up on the Humminbird website, but I don't know anyone that has one to see how they like it. -- Steve @ OutdoorFrontiershttp://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rodshttp://www.herefishyfishy.com I don't know anything about them either, but this is what I do know. I bought a 797c2si a couple weeks ago. It is awesome. Imagine sticking your head in the water and you can see everything on the bottom for 150' on each side. If I had it to do over again, I would come up with the extra grand and buy the 997 with a 8.5" screen. I have found that I have better results when the side imaging is set to 50' instead of 150' because it makes things more recognizable. You can go to the yahoo group below to see what I mean. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/sideimaging/ |
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