chrou54 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 19, 2024 9:44 am
Hi jfheath,
Thank you for your reply.
You are welcome !
chrou54 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 19, 2024 9:44 amRegarding the naming of the waypoints, it's complicated between the English and French versions and Garmin hasn't done anything to simplify things. In Belgium or France, we do not talk about "Via Points" or "Shaping point". On French-speaking forums it's a mix of POI (Point of Interest), Waypoint (waypoints), etc..., it's confusing. Only those who consult the English-speaking forums talk about Via and Shaping point.
There is a lot of confusion about this. There is also a lot of incorrect information. If you are reading forums like Facebook then much of it is very misleading, wrong or mischeivous.
Via Point = Announced Point
Shaping Point = Un-announced point.
Yes - both of those are good alternatives - and if you were to use these terms ont his forum, we would know exactly what you mean.
Waypoints - Locations that you have saved (eg flag tool in Mapsource, or in Basecamp). They can be put into a route and must be set to be either announced (via) or unannounced (Shaping)
chrou54 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 19, 2024 9:44 am I consider that the announced points will not be changed when importing the route into the XT2. For unannounced items, it's less clear. In certain circumstances (recalculation of route, change of profile, or fad of the XT2) they can be renamed or simply removed from the route followed by the GPS.
Ok - I have never had my hands on an XT2 - but this is an answer that I would give if you had an XT. I think the answer may also apply to your XT2.
The XT changes the names of any route point (announced or unannounced) seemingly at random. Sometimes it does, sometimes it doesn't. This has been a big issue for me - I like to number my route points - but the XT changes them. Sometimes. The same is also true of the 590 and the 595.
There is nothing that you can do about this ------
Except 1.
Make use of the saved Waypoints. On the French Language Zumo - this are Ou Aller -> Enregistre
You create a Waypoint on Basecamp using the Flag tool.
You can create a Waypoint and then add it to the route. Then set it as either announced (via) or unannounced (shaping). These points will also retain their name
Except 2. See the end of this message for more news on this.
chrou54 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 19, 2024 9:44 am
It doesn't matter how to get from point A to point B, but if you want to go through the beautiful little road parallel to the main road, it won't work. In these circumstances, I regret my Zumo 660, which is much more user-friendly in this regard. He followed the route he was told, one point, that's all.
The XT introduced a new method of routing. Faster time now seems to cause the Zumo to head for the nearerst fast road, rather than working out a number of possibilities and choosing the fastest. So if there is a main road somewhere behind you that is heading towards the place that you want to
be, than often, rather than choosing the road ahead, it will head for the fast road behind you. Your 660 didn't use to do this. Neither did the 590 or 595. But you would see it if you were riding parallel to a motorway.
To prevent the XT from doing this, it is necessary to use more shaping points. Not many more. For example if there is a motorway nearby and you want to travel on a parallel side road, one route sahping (unannounced) point is often not enough. The Zumo will visit the unannounced point, turn round and go back to join the motorway. But if you split your parallel road into thirds. Place one unannounced point a third of the way along, and another 2/3 of the way along. It usually prevents this from happening.
You can make the XT behave very much like the 660 by using only shaping (unannounced) points - but the XT will stillcalculate the actual route using faster roads, if there is one nearby - if you allow it to. Use the shaping points to stop it.
chrou54 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 19, 2024 9:44 am
I think that, the XT2, as it works in .gpx and no more with .gdb routes, recalculates constantly and even more so if you pass your file through Tread.
So, I almost only use the points announced, apart from the repeated announcements in the headset and the limitation to 29, I don't see any disadvantages to this practice (yet).
To transfer my routes into the gps, I don't work with BaseCamp. If the XT2 is connected, it announces that the XT2 is not supported by BC even though it works. In addition, it puts the routes in the internal memory of the GPS with all the inconvenience that this causes when you want to import several routes in succession. He only keeps the last one imported.
That is a feature that I mentioned in my last reply. If you transfer from Basecamp to internal storage, it saves your routes to a file called temp.gpx. If you disconnect the USB cable and then reconnect it and transfer more data, temp.gpx will be overwritten.
But yf you transfer everything that you want to transfer tot your Zumo without disconnecting the cable between transfers, then it will all be retained in temp.gpx
BUT... I also discovered that if you put tracks into
Internal Storage/GPX then the track will be imported automatically. However, the track data itslef will then be deleted from the gpx file. In other words - the gpx file is altered.
This may be a necessary feature of using Explore - or Tread on the XT2. I really don't like Explore for the way that I use the XT, and I have disabled it - but track data still gets deleted once it has been imported to internal storage.
However, if you create GPX files from Basecamp, and put them in the
SD Card / Garmin / GPX / folder, the Zumo cannot alter or delete them.
Keeping route point names intact. (2)
@FrankB and I have both been stumbling around this issue for a while. Frank had a solution that works, but it is not an easy or practical fix for anyone to use without risks. But we know that MRA routes rarely have their route point names changed - which is how that solution developed.
Then I came across a situation where my route point names had not changed - but could not recall what I had done in the days before that would have caused that to happen. But I told Frank. Then he stumbled across a similar situation, and he described it to me. I spent much of last night trying out different scenarios - observing when it worked and when it failed. But there seems to be one four click method that works. Every time. in every situation that I could think of.
Watch this space. Frank is about to publish it on here, and I will include a summary of the tests. But we need to be certain first.
[edit].
viewtopic.php?f=48&p=20126#p20126
@chrou54 - download the pdf from the first post. The first 2 chapters describe how the Zumo 590 can be used with BAsecamp. Most of it also applies to the XT.
viewtopic.php?t=521
From this document the pages on this forum relate to the XT - but place much less emphasis on the link with Basecamp.
viewtopic.php?t=1464