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Showing results for tags 'gps'.
Found 4 results
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Used only once. Brand new Half The Size No MMSI, Licences & Registration Diver Depth Rated To 425 feet (with cap closed) Transmits GPS Position To Boats Up To 34 miles It Floats! Positively Buoyant 150 euros Paypal Shipping from Portugal c/o Buyer
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Nautilus Lifeline Personal Locators—2 of them, 1 for you & 1 for your dive buddy. This handhold device is secured in a cordura holster for easy access from where it hangs on your BC. You may dive frequently and not think of it, but if a current sweeps you out of sight, this device can save your life. LCD display gives exact GPS coordinates—coordinates are also transmitted in an 8-mile radius. Device is also a VHF radio for instant communication to base vessel. The red button can also send a Mayday distress signal with GPS coordinates to Coast Guard or other marine patrol vessels. A critical device for the coral triangle or anywhere subject to current. Both these locators are like new—carried on one trip, 10 days, never used. Cost on each is $300 + $35 for the nylon holster. $375 takes the pair. 5½ x 2½ x 1¾ You pay shipping.
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Nautilus LifeLine Marine Radio and GPS for divers. A must have for diving. Purchased last September directly from Nautilus LifeLine. Used on one dive trip. Appears as new, pristine condition. Charged monthly while not being used. Includes the quick start guide, operations manual, USB adapter/charging cable, 2 USB port covers (1 spare). Loaded with the latest firmware. MMSI number and registration reset by Nautilus and now ready for new owner. Link to pictures: http://www.donhughes.us/Other/NautilusLifeLine/47802787_3ZSsfK Link to product information: http://www.nautiluslifeline.com/ Link to online version of the operations manual: http://www.nautiluslifeline.com/pdf/NLL_OperationsManual_1.02.pdf $220 Pay Pal, includes domestic Fed Ex shipping.
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Does anyone have experience using GPS devices to help map dive sites? They won't work underwater but I'm heading to a dive site (Twin Rocks, Anilao) where most or all will be visible from the surface. So the plan is to take bird-eye-view images from the surface while a GPS tracker records position, and then add the GPS information to the EXIF data based on time stamps. Software to do this already exists and GPS trackers cost as little as $50-100, some even being waterproof to 1m to protect against splashing. Does anyone have experience on getting gps-tracking information or maps on the web with Google earth or other means. Or do I have to go to html5 and code something myself. Does anyone have experience on getting depth information added to the exif data of the images. This is all for a fun citizen-science project so the solutions have to be affordable. However, comments don't have to be limited to "cheap solutions" as others may have grant money or deeper pockets. Thanks for any tips, Bart