![garmin homeport on boat gps garmin homeport on boat gps](https://texasfishingmaps.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/garmin-marine-gps.jpg)
- #Garmin homeport on boat gps archive#
- #Garmin homeport on boat gps full#
- #Garmin homeport on boat gps software#
- #Garmin homeport on boat gps Pc#
While that “Email” command seen in the BCM route menu is nice for showing folks where you’re headed it does NOT include, say, a GPX or KML file that can be imported into HomePort (which can also export Garmin data to GPX format). Note, though, that there is currently no way to share BCM data with HomePort except via an MFD and SD card.
#Garmin homeport on boat gps archive#
from the watch to an archive or to an SD card that you can later use to merge or replace MFD data. The screen above shows another hike on an island (too steep to circumnavigate with forest too thick to bushwack).
#Garmin homeport on boat gps software#
It can, for instance, handle quatix software updates and it now includes integration with ActiveCaptain cruising info.
#Garmin homeport on boat gps Pc#
with the Garmin 741 (though maybe that’s possible eventually?), it does play very nicely with Garmin HomePort PC (and Mac) software, which has gained a lot of features since reviewed here in 2010. While the quatix watch won’t share routes, tracks, etc. And I could have asked the quatix to turn that detailed track into a route back to Buckle Island. For instance, I could have used it to steer to Isleford Dock (even though I badly misspelled the waypoint name when created in BCM, and should know better) plus I can drill down on that map screen above to such detail as our two failed anchoring attempts on a heavily grassed bottom nearby.
#Garmin homeport on boat gps full#
I plan a full review eventually, but I find the watch phenomenally powerful and fairly easy to use given the small screen and only five buttons. Oops, I notice this morning that some quatix watches are subject to a voluntary recall due to a possible battery heat problem (only one reported case), though I have little doubt that the watch will be a very successful product, especially once the bugs are squashed. (My test unit is still sending bogus info, like a depth of 23,006 or -5 feet, for some reason yet undetermined)… And if your boat has a GNT 10 NMEA Transciever installed, you can also get Wind, Depth, etc on the watch, at least theoretically. The same evolution might work nicely for a racing sailor, first mapping the course as a route in BCM and then able to follow the boat’s progress even from the rail. Īt any rate, the screen above suggests how I created an island hike route in BCM, sent it to the watch, and then downloaded the watch’s track of the trail we actually found. Import/export of data from BCM to Garmin WiFi MFD is all-or-none ( as illustrated here) and could benefit from a similar pick list. As seen above, you can also import data from the watch in a very flexible manner. You simply put the quatix in BCM Share mode and it just works, no messing with Bluetooth pairing needed. If you have a Garmin quatix watch ‘device’ you can send it BCM routes, tracks, waypoints or ‘catches’ - a specialized waypoint with fields for all sorts of fishing info. In the meantime, though, note the “Send to Device” button on that same route menu above… I’m pretty sure that Garmin could also be sending depth, wind, AIS, and other N2K data to BCM if they felt that customers would value it, and of course they could also develope another app that mirrors and controls the screen of the 741 and other WiFi-equipped MFDs (as Navico, Furuno, and Raymarine have). Nice! (And note that while BCM is not itself a navigation program you can use it to keep an eye on your sweet mate’s steering, as shown on the top screen.) The iPad, indicidentally, is using Gizmo’s GPS over the same WiFi link. You do have to accept the route transfer and activation on the 741 but then it’s pushed over N2K to other Garmin MFDs on the network. The feature is activated with that “Navigate To” button on the BCM route menu. It was a minor thrill to realize that I could spec out the day’s plan on the pad, send it to the 741, and have it pop right up on the 7212 as the active route my sweet mate was using to steer by… Since there’s now a GPSMap 741 with built-in WiFi mounted at the lower helm and networked via NMEA 2000 with the 7212 on the fly bridge, one of the first things I did when we began our cruise last week was to see what that meant in terms of route planning on an iPad running BlueChart Mobile (BCM). Some of Garmin’s many wireless strategies are coming together on Gizmo and there have been some nice surprises.