MattS
Well-Known Member
Some rumoured new products soon as well worth looking at.
Can you link to any more info on this? What new products are expected?
Some rumoured new products soon as well worth looking at.
Yes I think mine is actually the ST2000+
I don't have experience with recent Garmin marine, but lots of experience of their other stuff in outdoor and fitness. Support with Garmin is excellent and their software these days seems to work well. I couldn't for the life of me work out which unit was which with Garmin, or how old/high in the range. This has not improved from what I can see so good luck working out which to buy!
Can you link to any more info on this? What new products are expected?
manufacturers always think their new stuff is exciting. At this stage it would be exciting to see some stock of existing models, having spent most of the summer waiting for parts.I was told exciting releases, but nothing more detailed than that
Paul can you explain why the 1000 series with buttons is £1000 less expensive than the 8000 series without? Which have been on the market long enough to be near obsolete? Which likely to be slow due to old chips? I found it hard to answer these and that pushed me further towards B&G whose range was extremely simple with just two models in various sizes. To be fair I also made the choice because I liked the modern look of the B&G![]()
+1I prefer Garmin to Raymarine or B&G, better support, in my experience.
My B&G plotters and radar seem happy to use an IP from my Teltonika router over Ethernet. There's no need to connect the wifi on the plotter as devices connect to the boat wifi.
Edit to add - there's no Wifi option for the radar anyway so Ethernet cabling is already in place to share radar between two plotters. The plotters were, however, happy to get an IP from the router over Wifi and I could use the various plotter features on that Wifi network from phone or tablet (or PC!). It's not as slick as I'd like, but it does work well. In Raymarine's defence there's no reason a few years ago that they'd have anticipated a router on board most boats.
I don't disagree how disapointing that is, but it's actually a much bigger change than you'd think and will affect the usability in other ways. Effectively this change will mean the plotter has to ask for an IP on the network before deciding to start advertising addresses from its own DHCP service. All that takes time, and if you have two plotters then both will need to undertake the same process with collision detection to ensure they don't both advertise on different ranges. While all that is happening your radar might time out since it didn't get an IP address on the network.at least two updates since I installed the plotter
On the B&G it's the radar cable, hence my comment on another thread recently. I cut the radar cable below the mast and hooked it up to the switch, and cut the Ethernet cables with B&G ends and crimped an RJ45 to the other end and voila fully Ethernet connected boat. Obviously more faff than your average yachty wants to deal with by a long shot, but for me not really an issue aside from buying some "outdoor" Ethernet cable which I now have about 80m spare remaining!Not sure if my Garmin will connect to my Teltonica router, either wirelessly or by ethernet, need to take the MFD out of the pod soon to connect a sonar transducer, i'll have a play.
On the B&G it's the radar cable, hence my comment on another thread recently. I cut the radar cable below the mast and hooked it up to the switch, and cut the Ethernet cables with B&G ends and crimped an RJ45 to the other end and voila fully Ethernet connected boat. Obviously more faff than your average yachty wants to deal with by a long shot, but for me not really an issue aside from buying some "outdoor" Ethernet cable which I now have about 80m spare remaining!
Probably worth mentioning that Garmin support varies wildly by country so in the UK and US you'll get amazing support but other places you may be lucky to get a reply. I've had similar to you though in the UK, my Fenix 5+ was replaced without question and was out of warranty, and they've sent me parts for my GPSMap handhelds on multiple occasions free of charge. My bike pedals have had all kinds of parts sent out proactively too "just in case". Yes, they make bike pedals too!Garmin and consider their support to be the best