Transfer routes from logbook to navigation?
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@david-young uh , did you restart the activity ? Then the breadcrumb is gone.
No need to be SO Loud , it works well you just have to know how to use it.
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@david-young breadcrumb is designed to last for the duration of the activity. If you finish it, breadcrumbs are eaten by the birds It is equivalent to the A3P function of take me back or something similar (reversing the route), with the difference that you just have to follow back the drawn route.
Of course, there is a problem if you, for instance, plan a two days activity, finish the first one, go to sleep and in the morning decides to go back. Then, you will need to have the route back previously planned or sync with your phone, bad thing if you run out of battery or, worse, you are in an area without coverage. There lays the main limitation of the iOS system, in my opinion.
Important as this feature may seem for some of us, please, take into consideration that good manners are always a good advice in any forum.
J
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I may have the wrong end of the stick: if so, I apologise…
A couple of weeks ago, I made a route (from A-B) in Komoot, and transferred it so my Spartan Sport WHR Baro via the Suunto app. On reaching ‘B,’ I stopped the activity and had lunch. For the return (B-A) I simply selected the same route and started walking: the watch recognised I was walking ‘the other way’ and navigated the reverse route. Would the S9B behave differently?
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@wakarimasen no
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@дима-мельниченко Phew! That’s good news! This ‘smartness’ is one of the reasons I sold watches from two other brands
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@wakarimasen keep in mind that in case of TbT navigation, waypoints are not reversed (at the moment?)
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@дима-мельниченко Good to know! The TBT wasn’t present on the Spartan, so I’m keen to try it on my new watch!
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Suunto seem to have removed from the S9 the code that converts a record to a route and they’ve put it in Suunto App instead.
So provided you have your phone with you, you can still make a route. You don’t need wifi, Bluetooth is fine.
This is with Android.
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When I fell in love with Suunto, I used A2, this model was created for wildlife, today’s C9 with its dependencies on phone, internet and operating systems make it an urban model. I want to say that the new application is great and useful and raises the level of the clock, but we must distinguish between the two. When we are in the wild, Suunto must depend solely on itself, no phones, androids, iOS, etc. When we return to civilization let him make connections by phone and attached and transfer his information.
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@nikshot
And with A2, you didn’t have offline sync of activities in the wild. So, multidays trip, with only some powerbank or refuges to refuelled, but you may loose activities with a watch full and no way to sync first days. -
@mff73I I don’t have it with the S9 either, and what if they are in the phone when I can’t use them … And with the A2 I have never lost activities.
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I have the S9B and I think that right now, regarding navigation, it is very very good, things can be improved of course but I really like it. I’m not the kind of guy that likes to be lost for some days in the woods, one morning/day is enough.
I think all of us are right and I think that what @nikshot asks for is a nice feature to have in the watch. I do not know how difficult is to do that, the info is there but maybe compressed and the watch is not capable of handle it, only Suunto knows.
@david-young the S9 and Spartans have never had this feature, and Ambits and Spartans/Sline have completely different OS.
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@nikshot said in Transfer routes from logbook to navigation?:
@mff73I I don’t have it with the S9 either, and what if they are in the phone when I can’t use them … And with the A2 I have never lost activities.
Yes, you do have offline sync without internet. I just checked mine again and I can upload a route to the watch with no internet. I am one version ahead on beta but this has been working for some time. I do not know if it works in the App Store version.
Here is a screen video recording. https://drive.google.com/file/d/18UfouL8ggmJ7SAtjLJBCTqRuDnn8CqtA/view?usp=sharing -
@brad_olwin yeah, when a route is present in your list is okay, that is working in the public release too. Now try the following on your next activity: put phone on airplane mode, track your activity as usual with your watch, when finished sync activity with Suunto app, save track as a route, sync back the route to your watch.
As I understood this is what @nikshot tries to accomplish and it’s not working on iOS. I can confirm this with my setup. -
@andrasveres Correct, I think we all know that this is not possible. Many were stating that loading routes offline was not working, I wanted to document that offline route loading is possible. And as discussed, there are workarounds for the specific case.
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@brad_olwin said in Transfer routes from logbook to navigation?:
I wanted to document that offline route loading is possible.
Correct, but only if previously a route is loaded into Suunto app. If someone is sharing a GPX file with me and my phone has no internet connection, I cannot import the route, on iOS at least.
But then again, I share the same belief as you mentioned: one should adequately prepare for a trip to an unfamiliar place.
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From everything written here I come to the conclusion that if I go with A2 which is an old generation watch I will be adequately prepared, but if I go with the new S9 no …or if I go to an unknown place, I have to take only my old A2, nothing else, but if I go with the modern and contemporary S9, I need a phone with internet and additional special adequate preparation …
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@nikshot by adequately prepare I meant having: route already planned and loaded onto Suunto app/watch, a paper map or at least an offline map on your phone, compass, battery pack etc.
I get your concern, but at the moment this is the situation when no internet connection is present. This may or may not change in the future, Suunto 9 might get or not this feature back, the important thing is that you should be aware of this and plan your activities accordingly.
Ultimately the most important is to enjoy your activity and stay safe. -
@andrasveresAnd I’m trying to explain that in order for a person to enjoy nature and relax, it is necessary to break away from the busy everyday life. The first thing I do when I climb the high mountains is to turn off my phone;) there I do not need phone calls, sms and emails … there the phone is needed to turn on only when you need help;) and in this regard keeps the phone turned off to keep the battery …
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@nikshot I keep my phone in airplane mode as I need and use the maps. Many times I am going places where I have not been before.