SDDiver5
Expedition Leader
Thanks for the reminder. I need to suspend my subscription until I head out next.So if you get it do you have to purchase a monthly. Subscription. I hate those
Thanks for the reminder. I need to suspend my subscription until I head out next.So if you get it do you have to purchase a monthly. Subscription. I hate those
Subscription is for the InReach two-way communication feature only. No one is going to allow you to communicate (send and receive text messages) via satellites without paying for it! For just the GPS functions there is no subscription required, and that applies to any GPS unit, even the GPS included in your smart phone.
For that reason I will not purchase one
Might be resurrecting an older thread but for those that have used both the new Tread Overland XL and a tablet with Gaia, from an exploration perspective, meaning I'm traveling offroad and want to check trails I did not plan for or perhaps find an alternate trail it seems to me when looking at earthmate and Gaia side by side there is no comparison. Gaia clearly had way more trails and routes visible to use for on the fly navigation. Would that be everyone's consensus or perhaps I'm missing something. Seems like for pre-planned routes Garmin is great but for pure discovery Gaia.
Did you install any good maps on the Tread? The maps it comes with do not show any of the more primitive roads and trails...that's why they're "free". Install some Garmin 100k maps, or the 24k maps for your region if you want to see the roads less traveled. Or download (free) the maps you need from gpsfiledepot.com....or any number of other sites.Might be resurrecting an older thread but for those that have used both the new Tread Overland XL and a tablet with Gaia, from an exploration perspective, meaning I'm traveling offroad and want to check trails I did not plan for or perhaps find an alternate trail it seems to me when looking at earthmate and Gaia side by side there is no comparison. Gaia clearly had way more trails and routes visible to use for on the fly navigation. Would that be everyone's consensus or perhaps I'm missing something. Seems like for pre-planned routes Garmin is great but for pure discovery Gaia.
Erik,
I currently have the Garmin Overlander, but I got to borrow a Tread XL for 10 days while touring In the backcountry with group of others. And I loved the Tread XL unit. But not enough to swap it for my Garmin Overlander.
My thoughts,
* screen is bright and large and the maps render very well. They are just beautiful.
* Highway navigation worked well enough, but I was mainly off-road, so hard to really test.
* the unit is more responsive and snappy than the Overlander. Just feels better.
* I really wanted an external GPS antenna, which the tread supports. But, both units work well enough without the external antenna.
* And I really really wanted the in built inReach, again with an external antenna. This wI’ll be the reason I would buy the Tread, if I ever did. At the moment I just pair my inReach mini to the Overlander, and it works well enough, but … I really want the inbuilt one. And external antenna.
* I prefer the mount of the Overlander, just easier to snap on and off. The Tread mount is good, but not as easy as the Overlander, and you will be taking it on and off.
* There is a feature (or bug) with the Tread, it will not display a route created offline and uploaded. Even had the Garmin engineers look at the problem, and they confirmed it is a problem. The Overlander works fine.
I just spent a week in the backcountry with friends and swapped my Overlander for a large iPad running Gaia and a Garmin Glo. For planning and route finding, the Gaia is so much better. No competition in my mind. But, and this is a big but, I found Gaia on the iPad really hard to use while driving on bumpy roads. It is just too sensitive. Probably an issue on highways as well. The Garmin displays are so simple and designed to be used while driving, you tend to be able to do what you want without the app doing weird things. I plan to bring and use Gaia (with paid subscription) all the time going forward for planning and reference, but the Garmin for navigation while driving.
Hope some of the above helps. I could talk for hours on this. If I did not have the Overlander already, I would definitely go for the Tread XL for driving and Gaia on a tablet for around camp.