newbie at GPS question

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TabernacleNative

Guest
I usually use Google Earth to "spot" the places I'm going to get out to and then use my Garmin GPS in the car to lead me there. I'll use the Carranza Memorial as an example - the Google Earth coordinates are 39 46'38.49"N and 74 37'56.43"W. My Garmin coordinates are N39 46.642 W74 37.926. Whats the conversion so I can take the Google Earth numbers and enter them into the Garmin?
 

ICANOE2

Explorer
Sep 30, 2007
141
1
53
Browns Mills
I don't know if there is a conversion or not from google earth.
I noticed the that the numbers were a bit off at other locations that I got from google earth as compared to the gps in hand.
Maybe try the google earth numbers of a known location and save them as a waypoint. Then go to said location and power up the gps and select and goto that waypoint (google earth numbers) and see how far away it is.
 

Enoch

Scout
Apr 15, 2007
41
1
Camden County, NJ
I think Google earth is expressed in seconds and Garmin is using a decimal; so 38.49 / 60 = .6415 (Garmin has .642) and 56.43 / 60 = .9405 (garmin has .926). But I'm just taking a guess so I wouldn't bet my life on it...
 

RednekF350

Piney
Feb 20, 2004
5,058
3,328
Pestletown, N.J.
In GoogleEarth, go to "tools" and then "options".
You can set the units to display as degrees and decimals of a degree OR degrees, minutes seconds and decimals of a second.
The default is degrees, minutes, seconds and decimals of a second.
The degrees, minutes, seconds prototcol is the same as time.
60 seconds to a minute and 60 minutes to a degree.
0.5 minutes is 30 seconds (half a minute) 0.5 degrees is 30 minutes (half an hour or degree)
If you copy 72.675 degrees from Google Earth, multiply 0.675 times 60 = 40.5 minutes
Your input would be W072d 40.5 minutes and would look like W072 40.5 for your Garmin.
You can also easily change your Garmin settings to any units you would like so as to maintain consistency with any mapping program from which you are obtaining coordinates.
Be extremely careful with your formats.
A misinterpretation of the units and faulty input will throw you off more than a country mile.
A minute of latitude is a nautical mile or 6,076 feet. Misinterpreting seconds for minutes can really do you in.
Scott
 
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TabernacleNative

Guest
Thanks for the quick help! A small change on my Garmin and on its Topo software on the computer, and it sincs up damn close to Google Earth - you never want to say "dead on"
 
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