I've tried hard to use only my Samsung Note 2 and dump my Garmin Montana, but the fact you can easily make routes and waypoints on your home PC using Garmin Basecamp (and store them there) and upload it all to the Montana trumps all of the Android apps I have tried. The Android app I use the most is called Gaia GPS and it is getting there, but it will be a year or two before it has all the same capabilities as the Garmin Montana and Basecamp. If Garmin was smart they would just port the Montana software to Android and be done with it. I think 10 years from now Garmin will find themselves out of the consumer market once smartphone GPS software technology can pair with the desktop GPS app better.
That time is now. See below.
I concur. I've also used Garmin Basecamp to build a vast database of others routes and waypoints. The only problem I have is its inability to be used as a moving map with a USB GPS puck.
I literally just used basecamp to draw a route and add waypoints. I then used the export my collection button to save the .GPX with all of that in it. I then opened it on my phone and was able to follow the route and see all my waypoints and everything associated with it.
A GPX is GPX regardless of what system you use to interpret it or create it.
A copy of mytrails pro for the android system is $2.38 and has tons of maps and interfaces with 3rd party software such as dropbox so that almost instantly (gpx is a small file) I can save what ever I created in one of the 12 gpx editors i have installed on my desktop and then open it in one of the 4 gps softwares installed on my phone. add to that I dont have to pay for aerial imagery or the latest topos from the USGS or any of the other of the dozen mapsets I have. And the only limitation is the size of the sd card you chose to buy. My cell has a 128gig and my tablet that is used for nav is at 64gig.
And back to cost. a 24k garmin map for handheld is 100 bucks. and they only cover regions. so for the whole US you would need to buy 6-8 diffrent ones. on top of the device which is 3-400 bucks 600 if you want a ****ty 5 megapixel too.
so you are easily looking at 1000 dollars just to do what anyone can do for tons less.
any android device with a gps sensor will work. An unlocked entry level device from blu if you want a cell or a lenovo tab like i reviewed in a different post is under 80 bucks. a micro sd card is cheap at 10-12 bucks for 16 gig.(plenty really unless you are a map whore like me but then a 64 gig card is 24 bucks)
mytrails pro is $2.38
Backcountry navigator is $12
starting to see where garmin delorme and tomtom are pricing themselves out of the market?
And if you are a true cheap *** you can get avenza pdf maps on your phone for free and use caltopo.com to create geospatial pdfs again for free. That gives you 21 maps with the ability to customize to your needs completely free. and the only buy in is the phone you are already using because avenza runs on ios android and windows phone. Dont be cheap tho. get my trails you will not be disappointed.