Australian Topographic Maps For Garmin Gps

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Garmin Connect Community for tracking. TOPO Australia and New Zealand. Features digital topographic and street maps for all of Australia and New Zealand.

Product # 010-11268-00 (microSD™/SD™ card) The Garmin TOPO Australia navigational software covers topographic detail of Australia. Routable Tracks, outback trails, 4WD destinations, perennial/seasonal lakes, rivers and streams are shown in great detail. TOPO maps include points of interests such as urban, rural and outback areas including famous ones such as Birdsville, Strezelecki, Oodnadatta and Canning Stock. TOPO Australia Features:. Navigational Software. Includes Extremely Detailed Topographic Maps of Australia. Routable Tracks, Outback Trails, 4WD Destinations, Perennial/Seasonal Lakes, Rivers & Streams.

Terrain contours at 20 meter intervals approximating 1:100K maps. Searchable by Urban, Rural & Outback Areas. Routable Roads and Points of Interest Provided by HEMA & NAVTEQ. Outback Amenities -Famous Routes Including Birdsville, Strezelecki, Oodnadatta, Canning Stock & more. Land details based on Terrain Contours, Summitt Points & Topographical Elevations.

Trip & Waypoint Management Functions (DVD only). Elevation Profile(On Compatible Garmin Devices) Estimates Terrain Difficulty.These Functions of this Product Work w/ Nearly all Garmin GPS Units, Excluding the GPS100 Family & Panel Mount Aviation Units. Just Awesome!! Written By: Aarush It was my last year in the college, so all my friends wanted to plan a long tour to Australia. Before planning we all bought a navigational software, Garmin TOPO Australia which would help us to plan a trip. We were so amazed seeing all points of interests such as urban, rural and outback areas including famous ones such as Birdsville, Strezelecki, Oodnadatta and Canning Stock.

All these places have some or the other scenic beauty worth seeing. We all are very happy with the purchase of this software. Perfect Manager Written By: Salvatore I am a trucker by Profession and recently got transferred to Australia. I wanted a navigational software which would help me to navigate through entire Australia. I purchased the new Garmin TOPO Australia, a navigational software which gave me important information relating to this place.

It consists routable tracks, outback trails, destinations, perennial/seasonal lakes, rivers and streams are shown in great detail. It has solved my problem. Now I can beautifully manage my routes and drives in Australia.

I bought a new Etrex 30 GPS yesterday, and after playing around a little bit, I came to the conclusion that the base map that it comes with is pretty hopeless for bushwalking. After doing a little bit of searching I have found a few different topographic software programs, and was after some user feedback of their ease of use and quality.

The ones I have found are: Garmin TOPO, $209.95, available as a 2.83GB download, or available on mini-SD (however is says on it's website: 'Reduced price map updates are not available for these cards. If you want to update the maps, you must purchase a new card that includes the latest map data.' GPSOZ OzTopo, $229, on a USB flash drive, and preloaded on a 2GB mini-SD card.

There are probably other software that I haven't found, so please add them if you can recommend one. Etrex 30 is a good unit. I haven't tried either of those maps, but have heard good things about the OzTopo from 4WD people (not bushwalkers) There are three more mappinig systems I would suggest you consider: 1. This is a community generated map. Depending on where you will be walking it is often the most detailed GPS map available. Downloads here: 2.

This is a not-so-shonky garmin edition of the freely available 1:250k Geoscience Australia mapping data. Download here: 3. Contours Australia.

This is a transparent contour overlay that can be used with both of the above maps. It's based on the NASA Space Shuttle topo mission SRTM data and is very handy.

It used to be downloadable for free, but I expect the hosting costs got out of hand so they are now available on a USB stick for $20.80 In Australia I use Openstreetmap with Contours Australia and I have yet to be disappointed. Photohiker wrote:In Australia I use Openstreetmap with Contours Australia and I have yet to be disappointed. I have installed TAS.img on my GPS, how are the contour overlays installed? Is it simply copy and paste to the card? I find the that the detail of contours that are in my Garmin Montana sadly lacking in detail, everything else is ok. Oh I forgot, Is it possible to see OSM maps in Basecamp?, if so I am not having much luck. Athrotaxis cupressoides Posts: 351 Joined: Sun 09 Dec, 2012 7:20 am Region: Tasmania Gender: Male.

Oh I forgot, Is it possible to see OSM maps in Basecamp?, if so I am not having much luck. Ok, and good point Garmin uses 2 different types of files depending on their destination.IMG Files. These are for GPS recievers only. Just drop them into the garmin folder on any recent Garmin GPS and they become available on the GPS immediately. Unfortunately, these files are not readable by Basecamp.

(I think there is a hack somewhere that can convert them, but lets not go there) Map Installers. These are.EXE files on Windows, and.GMAPI files on Macintosh. Double clicking the file installs the maps in the Basecamp maps directory structure, and they become available in Basecamp under the maps menu.

Maps For Garmin Etrex

If you use the Computer a lot with maps, then the installers are a good way to go. You can transfer the tracks/routes/waypoints as well as the parts of the maps you want available on your GPS via Basecamp and it's utilities.

This means that you only need to download one file and it will cater for both the computer and the GPS. These files aren't as readily available as the OSM Australia IMG files, but you can get them.

Have a look here: These are regularly updated so the link will not work forever, it will probably expire when the files are regenerated. To get the updated maps, go to and Select 'Australia' under the Oceania drop down, the click the link 'Download Map Now' and you will be presented with the latest download directory.

Be aware that the list down the left of the map on that page are links to specific.IMG files, (remember, not usable in basecamp, but usable in the GPS). Got the TAS.img to display in BC. Couldn't figure out why the tracks would not display but I have that sorted as well.

Have to study up on the exe files you mention. Have to get contours now, suppose that will take a while and then figure out how to get it to work.

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Be interesting to see how they all compare. I like how all my existing tracks show on the OSM map. Never was game to play with the GPS too much as I was flying blind, managed to find a couple of sites today that steered me in the right direction, and really that's what I needed, somewhere to start. Well off to study your post and take it a bit further. Thanks for answering. Athrotaxis cupressoides Posts: 351 Joined: Sun 09 Dec, 2012 7:20 am Region: Tasmania Gender: Male.

Hi Davo I being Taswegien could catch up and set your unit up with Contour Australia 5 metres if you are interested. The complete Australia set is 2GB but you can load State by state depending on your units size. I am Launceston/Devonport based. The trick with Garmins is enabling and disabling the correct maps on the unit. As the contours are transparent you enable them them and the OSM image you want.

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I also have Shonkey Good idea to play with free stuff before shelling out on commercial maps as commercial maps are often poor for bushwalking. Andrew, I have a Garmin Montana 650t loaded with the Aus/NZ map and find that in a lot of cases it is satisfactory, but at other times I find the topo sadly lacking. It seems that where one mapping system fails another picks up, this is only in relationship to the topo side of things, I'll leave the operations of each individual system out of the equation for the time being. At this stage I cannot comment either on the Contour Australia overlays as I don't have them loaded yet but I have looked at many commercially available maps and if you could put them all together it would be fantastic. I was leaning away from the Garmin maps until I found that where the others had great detail in certain locations that I required, in other locations they didn't, whereas the Garmin did - stalemate.

To date the best I have been able to come up with is a combination of the GPS and traditional hardcopy maps. The technology side of things today is incredible to what we had years ago. What we can do with the home computer and a handheld GPS is outstanding, we just need some of the components of the total system to catch up - namely TOPO, hence the upcoming tryout of Contours Australia. I am looking forward to the day when the total digital side of things actually catches up with what we have available on paper, it's close but in my opinion just not quite there yet. Keeping in mind of course that paper maps and a compass will never be replaced 100%, at least at the moment. So there you have it from my point of view - not a matter of being a disgruntled customer, just trying to improve what we have available to gain more knowledge. Cheers Davo1 Athrotaxis cupressoides Posts: 351 Joined: Sun 09 Dec, 2012 7:20 am Region: Tasmania Gender: Male.