Thread: GPS for touring
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Old 09-14-25 | 04:34 PM
  #33  
Tourist in MSN
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Bikes: 1961 Ideor, 1966 Perfekt 3 Speed AB Hub, 1994 Bridgestone MB-6, 2006 Airnimal Joey, 2009 Thorn Sherpa, 2013 Thorn Nomad MkII, 2015 VO Pass Hunter, 2017 Lynskey Backroad, 2017 Raleigh Gran Prix, 1980s Bianchi Mixte on a trainer. Others are now gone.

Originally Posted by Steve B.
Biking dedicated GPS are organically designed to make it easy to create a route or multiple routes on Garmin or third party and get those routes onto the device very easily. If you need to transfer .gpx files to a hiking model, which I don't know how well that works and is a bit more work involved every day. My preference is an Edge with good battery life like a 1040. OTOH, I have followed a couple doing a cross USA as well as cross France who used a generic Android phone and Kamoots. The phone had an external battery for supplemental power. This seemed to work very well for them, so it's a good option it seems.
Easy to put a GPX file onto a hiking GPS with a computer.

About 11 months ago I finally upgraded my phone to an Android 14 (now 15) phone. I was curious if I could download a GPX file off internet and put on my non-cycling GPS (mine uses a USB-Mini, not a Micro cable). It worked quite easily.

I was not able to do that with my Android 7 phone that I finally replaced last year, but now I can do that with a newer phone.
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