Now, that is the best thing I've heard about the Garmin and makes me rethink it for a minute. "[It's] just fun to mess with." Cool.
This got me thinking... I have owned several Garmin units in the past for hiking and mountain climbing and other outdoor exploration and I enjoy the capabilities of their higher end products. I still carry a Garmin Montana and paper maps when overlanding because Gaia and my android are not always the most dependable combination. They have left me high and dry before. I really like redundancy... Most of the guys I know have more than one method of navigation for redundancy and versatility...
So I decided to check into the overlander unit... I think it is definitely worth my investment... Maybe not for everyone but certainly for me... So here is some information on the Overlander that may interest others.
I like the magnetic mounting option and 1 inch ball mount that come with it.
Voice-activated navigation (operate device with spoken commands) it can report traffic conditions and do bluetooth calling, Driver alerts for speed traps and other traffic warnings.
The Overlander has a built-in compass, altimeter and barometer these are things that come in handy when you need to keep an eye on weather conditions. I like to be able to track altitude because I did a lot of mountain climbing when younger and it is mostly a curiosity thing but, often good to know. It does sunset / sunrise times too.
In city mapping, topo maps, hunt maps, 3D Maps, land boundaries, 4x4 roads, forest service roads, trails, storage for Satellite imaging and Quad maps, it has POI info on camping sites and other things of interest without cell connection.
You can input vehicle size and weight for alerts when driving this comes in handy for taller lifted vehicles with RTTs. It does pitch and roll angles so I can get rid of the cheap little gauge I have on my dash and put the Overlander in its place. Paired with an Inreach it will do texting and get other weather reports when out of cell range. In Nevada and many places out west we are way out of cell range all the time. Heck my Sat phone hardly works out here... lol
It can do up to 4 cameras so, one for reverse, one pointed to the right side so I can see traffic better when backing out of a blind parking spot (my rig has no side windows) and one mounted up front for those steep blind declines I hate so much... lol
I was going to get a pad for Gaia but, I think it will wait for now. I can still run gaia on my phone but, this Overlander is making too much sense for me as an all in one tool... I don't have room for a 10 inch pad on the dash right now plus I would have to create a mount for it too. With the Overlander it will replace something on my dash I wont need and I already have a mount for it. I like keeping things simple...