Another Busted Spoke, but the right decision
Now, the GPS. It's working OK now I have paired up the receiver with the N70. I noticed that Garmin have updated their eTrex line with 'high sensitivity' receivers with 17 hours battery life. So, just like my new Bluetooth GPS then. But what's this shown on the mapping model on their website?
It's Peckham Rye in South
London! But to all the world looking like a Welsh
Valley. Hmm. Here it is in viewranger.
MUCH more detail. I think I made the right choice.
Getting ready for BoA
- Wednesday night train to Oxford
- Thursday morning, walking tour of Oxford and visit to Ashmolean museum
- Thursday afternoon, ride down to Wallingford (20 miles?) - camp on the river
- Friday, ride 11km down to Goring and joining the Ridgeway to the western end, then take the canal to Bradford-on-Avon
- So, did some purchases early this week (pay day) 3 of them came today:
The program is
superficially easy to use, but I am yet to figure out
how to change the map. It supports several online
maps, and I have changed it from map to blurry
satellite, but by accident, and I can't change it
back, and waiting for Yahoo's map tiles to download
is SLOW. Trying it with Viewranger I got mixed
results. I think this was due to me not pairing the
unit with the phone and giving it free access to the
phone.
I used it to log me as I rode over to Greenwich to
help a mate move house. After a few hundred meters I
got a beep to tell me that the connection was lost. A
couple of stops, restarts and reboot later and long
waits for it to search for devices, it got working
again. Tried it tonight after having paired the
devices using the Bluetooth tool on the phone and
sha-bing, worked instantly in Viewranger. Back on the
ride though, I tested the Trip function on the phone
just after Deptford and it didn't seem to give me
moving information. Several miles later I realise
that the app has frozen ruining the log, a bit.
However, looking on what it did record it was very
accurate. I've got another longer ride over to
Chiwick tommorow. So, I'll see if the reliability
improves.
The second thing that came via Royal Mail van
delivery (the GPS was a missed delivery from Friday),
was the Tempur Travel Pillow.
The packaging was pretty
bad, a big cardboard box containing a little pillow.
It should have been shipped in its little compression
bag which is about 1/5th the size. But I
can't really sleep with a regular camping pillow, so
this luxury is an essential. And the last thing to
come was delivered by the postman:
Ooh, solar panels! This was intended for charging the Phone and GPS on the road, but the GPS has a long battery life and a non-standard power port (standard meaning Nokia), so this will do only for the phone. No idea how it will work, but I bought it because the panels actually charge a big battery, and you then plug the battery (behind the panels) into the phone. It also has 2 USB port for charging an iPod. The charging works in natural light and specifically not with fluorescent lighting. True too, I put it in sunlight and the LED shows it is charging. I put it under a downlighter and it sort of charges, I put it against my iMac screen and nothing. Anyway, I think the idea is that you charge the battery normally and then use the sun as a top-up. We shall see.



