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®
Rino 650
owner’s manual
August 2011 190-01183-03_0B Printed in Taiwan
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© 2011 Garmin Ltd. or its subsidiaries All rights reserved. Under the copyright laws, this manual may not be copied, in whole or in part, without the written consent of Garmin. Garmin reserves the right to change or improve its products and to make changes in the content of this manual without obligation to notify any person or organization of such changes or improvements. Go to www.garmin.com for current updates and supplemental information concerning the use of this product. ® ® ® ® Garmin
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Table of Contents Navigating a Saved Track12 Table of Contents Navigation �����������������������������13 Getting Started ������������������������1 Navigating to a Destination13 Keys1 Map14 Manual Conventions 2 Compass 14 Battery Information 2 Navigating to a Contact 16 Acquiring Satell
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Table of Contents Time Settings 24 Caring for the Device 35 Position Format Settings 24 Data Management 36 Heading Settings 25 Appendix �������������������������������39 Altimeter Settings 25 Additional Maps 39 Geocache Settings 26 Optional Accessories 39 Routing Settings
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Getting Started Keys Getting Started WARNING See the Important Safety and Product Information guide in the product box for product warnings and other important information. ➊ When using your device the first time, you should complete the following ➋ tasks to set up the device and get to ➌ know the basic features. 1. Install the batteries (page 2). 2. Register the device (page 4). 3. Acquire satellites (page 3). 4. Set up the radio (page 6). 5. Mark a waypoint (page 10). Key Description
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Getting Started The device operates on the included Hold to turn on or off the device ➋ lithium-ion battery pack or an optional Select to adjust backlight, volume, squelch level, and to Alkaline battery pack, which uses four lock or unlock the screen AA batteries (page 34). Hold to talk PTT stands for ➌ For tips on maximizing battery life and push-to-talk other battery information, see page 33. Manual Conventions Installing the Lithium-ion Battery All the pages are found on the home
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Getting Started 3. Gently press the battery pack into place. ➊ 4. Turn the D-ring clockwise. Charging the Lithium-ion Battery Before you use the device the first time, charge the battery. Charging a fully depleted battery takes 6 hours. 4. Charge the device completely. The device will not charge when A fully charged battery can run for outside the temperature range from 0°C up to 14 hours before it must be to 45°C (from 32°F to 113°F). recharged. 1. Plug the AC charger into a standard
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Getting Started A question mark flashes while the Adjusting the Backlight device determines your location. Brightness The backlight levels vary for the The GPS bars indicate satellite different power sources. For example, strength. When the bars are green, the the highest backlight setting while device has acquired satellite signals. running on AA batteries is lower than the highest while running on the Registering Your Device lithium-ion battery. This is to extend • Go to http://my.
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Radio station. Radio Choosing a Channel The radio page provides interface for 1. Select Radio > Channel. UHF CBRS-Australia/ UHF PRS New Zealand radio operations. 2. Use + or - to select a channel. Scanning Channels Radio Channels You can scan the channels for voice Channel Frequency activity. 9–30, 39, 40, UHF CBRS/PRS Select Radio > Scan. 49–60, 64–70, channels 79, 80 Setting Up a Scan List 1R–8R (31–38) Repeater You can pick which channels and codes 41R–48R (71–78) channels to scan
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Radio voice signals. This is helpful if a signal • Squelch t one Mode: is going out of range. ◦ CtCSS —Continuous Tone Controlled Squelch System Select Radio > Monitor. allows you to ignore unwanted calls from persons using the Muting the Radio same channel. 1. Select . ◦ DCS—Digital-Coded Squelch 2. Select Volume. allows you to ignore unwanted calls from persons using the Radio Settings same channel. Select Radio > > Setup Radio. • Repeater Channel—Enables the • Send Location—enabl
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Radio Viewing Contacts on the Map About Contacts 1. Select Contacts. The first time a signal is received from another Rino user, the new contact 2. Select a contact. page appears. From that page, you 3. Select View Map. can show their location on the map, navigate to their location (page 16), or Notes add them to your contacts list. Note: Notes transmit to all users on your current channel and code. Adding a New Contact When a new contact signal is received, You can send notes to other Ri
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Radio Creating a Note About Peer-to-Peer 1. Select Notes > . You can send your location to another 2. Write the note. Rino using peer-to-peer positioning. You can also track the movement of The maximum character limit is 13. other Rino users and navigate to their 3. Select . locations. 4. Select an option: Enabling Peer-to-Peer • Select Send Note to send Positioning without saving. Select Setup > Radio > Send • Select Save. Location > on. • Select Send
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Radio Radio Page Status Radio 1W Transmit power at 1 watts Indicators Radio 2W Transmit power at Message Description 2 watts Activity on A signal is being Radio 5W Transmit power at channel received, but does 5 watts not match the current code Note: If your device battery is too Radio Off The 2-way radio is low, the power level is decreased turned off automatically. Receiving The device Status Bar Description transmission is receiving a transmission on the The radio is on s
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Waypoints and Tracks 5. Select . Waypoints and Tracks Deleting a Waypoint Waypoints 1. Select Waypoint Manager. Waypoints are locations you record and 2. Select a waypoint. store in the device. 3. Select Delete Waypoint. Creating a Waypoint Increasing the Accuracy of a You can save your current location as Waypoint Location a waypoint. Waypoint averaging allows you to increase the accuracy of a waypoint Select Mark Waypoint. location by collecting multiple samples Finding a Waypoint of
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Waypoints and Tracks Managing Track Log Recording About Sharing Data 1. Select Setup > t racks > t rack Your device can send or receive data Log. when connected to another compatible device. You can share waypoints, 2. Select Record, Do Not Show or geocaches, routes, and tracks. Record, Show on Map. If you select Record, Show on Sending and Receiving Data Map, a line on the map indicates Wirelessly your track. Before you can share data wirelessly, 3. Select Record Method. you must be w
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Waypoints and Tracks Note: Using the Most often • Select Save Portion, and select interval provides the most track a portion. detail and fills up the device Clearing the Current Track memory quicker. Select Setup > Reset > Clear Viewing the Current Track Current t rack > Yes. The track being recorded is called the Deleting a Track current track. 1. Select t rack Manager. 1. Select t rack Manager > Current 2. Select a track. t rack. 3. Select Delete > Yes. 2. Select an option: • To show t
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Navigation 2. Select an item you want to search Navigation near. 3. Select Use. Navigating to a 4. Navigate using the map (page 14) Destination or compass (page 14). You can use the Where To? menu to ® find a destination to navigate to. Not all Starting a TracBack Where To? categories are available in You can navigate back to the beginning all areas and maps. of a track. This can be helpful when finding your way back to camp or the 1. Select Where t o?. trail head. 2. Select an item.
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Navigation Map Compass represents your location on the map. The device has a 3-axis compass. You As you travel, the moves. When you can use a bearing pointer or a course are navigating to a destination, your pointer to navigate to your destination. route is marked with a magenta line. To customize the compass settings, see To customize the map settings, see page 25. page 22. To customize the map Calibrating the Compass dashboard and data fields, see page 20. Notice Using the Map Calibrate
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Navigation Navigating with the Bearing ➋ Pointer ➌ When navigating to a destination, ➊ the bearing pointer points to your destination, regardless of the direction you are moving. ➍ 1. Begin navigation to a destination (page 13). The course pointer ➊ indicates your 2. Select Compass. relationship to a course line ➋ leading 3. Turn until points toward the to the destination. The course line top of the compass, and continue to your destination is based on your moving in that direction
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Navigation Navigating with the Course Pointer Geocaches Before you can navigate with the Geocaching is a type of treasure course pointer, you must change the hunting, in which geocachers seek pointer setting to Course (CDI) hidden treasures using GPS coordinates (page 25). posted on the Internet by those hiding the geocache. 1. Begin navigation to a destination (page 13). Downloading Geocaches 2. Select Compass. 1. Connect your device to a computer 3. Use the course pointer to navigate