Garmin Colorado & Oregon Series Handheld GPS Navigator Units
Colorado™ 300, 400c Handheld GPS Navigator Featuring an innovative Rock n Roller™ input wheel for intuitive screen selection and easy one-hand operation, Garmins new Colorado series handhelds are the ultimate outdoor exploration tools. Not only do each of these units come adventure-ready with a high-sensitivity GPS receiver, barometric altimeter, electronic compass and color TFT screen, but now youll have the ability to wirelessly exchange user routes, tracks, waypoints and geolocations with other buddy units. And theres even a built-in JPEG picture viewer for sharing pictures of your excursions. All models feature worldwide basemap and rugged, slim cases that are waterproof to IPX 7 standards. Each have preloaded cartography for different areas—BlueChart® g2 marine charts, inland lakes data or TOPO contour maps with unique 3D Walk the Trail elevation perspective, so you can choose the maps you want for the type of outdoor activities you participate in most. Plug in optional SD cards (sold separately) via the SD card expansion slot to add mapping detail and broaden your map coverage. ———————————————————————————————– Oregon™ 200, 300 Handheld GPS Navigator The first handheld outdoor navigator with convenient touchscreen operation! Following on the tremendous popularity of the Colorado line of handheld navigators, Garmin has done one better with the debut of the Oregon Series, the first handheld navigators to …
quixoticoaf81
October 28, 2010I’m in the market for a handheld, saw some good articles on gpssatnavreviews (.) com
action909
October 12, 2009what about dakota 20 ?
lexmark136
September 19, 2009thanks for the post, it just sumed up his 7 min video… i’ll look into the 300
q1s3d45g6
July 4, 20092:35 Colorado uses SD cards, not micro SD
FierceDeityLink1
June 20, 20094:05 The Oregon 200 doesn’t have an barometric altimeter or digital magnetometer. There’s no reason to buy the Colorado anymore. The only good reason to buy the Oregon 400 series is for the 4GB of internal memory (compared to 1GB on the 300 and lol 24MB on the 200). The 300 is the sweet spot for the price and you can always “acquire” the maps later and an 8GB microSDHC card for $20. Just ordered an Oregon 300 for $250 the other day.