Originally Posted By: Coyotehunter_If you had a Garmin Montana 650 GPS you could use it with City Navigator Software and add the suction cup holder with speaker and cigarettle lighter power plug to the Montana and then use city navigator software and the Kirsch mini SDHC chip to do both navigate on the roads and highway with talking directions to your destination as well as take the Garmin Montana GPS out in the field with you.
I'm not sure if the Oregan has this same capability or not.
I'm not real familiar with the Montana 650, but for that price I'll put up with moving the chip! It's usually not that bad. When coyote hunting I rely primarily on the truck unit, and while big game hunting I'm usually away from the truck and using the handheld, so there's really not too much switching. Maybe half a dozen times over the course of the season. That's worth $300 to me.
Quote:I think I'm going to buy a Nuvi Device for my truck and use a map program for my Montana at the same time. That way I'll know who owns the property along the road I'm driving on and also be able to see what street I'm on and where I'm going.
In my Nuvi, the basic Garmin map with road information is displayed at the same time as land ownerhip. If the Montana is more advanced than the Oregon can do this, you may not need the Nuvi. Might be worth checking out before spending the money.
Quote:The Montana 650T is pretty expensive at around $600. And the speaker window thing is some thing around $50 to $100. The map chip for the driving program is about $100 plus.
I already have the Montana 650T but I'm thinking of just buying a GPS Mini SDHC card with the maps on it. But Kirsch doesn't seem to have a map for the state of IN or Ky or Il. So I'll have to buy another map from a different company that covers IN.
I believe Kirsch's primarily focuses on the western states. Check out
Hunting GPS Maps for some other options. It looks like they offer both IN and IL, but no KY (the state that is).
Quote:I hear what you are saying about having to take the mini SDHC card out and not lose them while out in the field or in the truck. That means you have to open up the back and remove the battery to get to the card. And then you have to have a safe place to store the map cards and not lose them.
Like I said, it's really not that much hassle. And Kirsch's TraxWEST that I use has all ten states on one MicroSD card, so no need to keep track of multiple cards.
Good luck!