Team DeLorme to Trek Across Maine…

June 18, 2009

2009 color Trek Logo_25th Anniversary

Team DeLorme Logo

I’m headed out for the Trek Across Maine in a few hours, and I just wanted to make a quick blog entry to show everyone the route and let you know that I bought a new gadget to go along with my Earthmate PN-40 GPS… I’ll be SPOT Casting my way from Sunday River in Bethel to Steamboat Landing in Belfast! The ride is a 3-day, 180 mile trek to raise money for the Maine Lung Association to help them with their fight against lung disease. This is our fifth year riding as a team. We’ve been making the Trek maps for much longer than that and are proud to be Gold Level sponsors of the event. We’ll be giving away two PN-40s with bike mounts along with all the data for the ride so that two people can join Team DeLorme in knowing exactly how far it is to the next rest stop! Learn more about the Trek and Team DeLorme.

Trek Across Maine 2009

I’ve created a few posts in the past with information about how our Earthmate PN-Series devices provide turn-by-turn directions, making them great navigation aids on long bike rides. I’ve also shared posts about the athletic data options in our Topo USA product. Here’s a screenshot from our Sunday River Training Ride that took place two weeks ago. You’ll see in the graph that my heart rate hit 196 while I was trying to stay ahead of one of the other riders… I’m submitting the profile to the Tour because I think this climb would be Beyond Category! It sure felt like it anyway…

Trek Training Ride Map

So keep your eye out for Team DeLorme if you live between Bethel and Belfast… if you’re further away than that you can see our trek play out on our SPOT Adventures page where I’ll be SPOT Casting my location throughout the weekend. There will be an update every 10 minutes… pretty cool stuff.

Chip Noble
Team DeLorme


Hybrid Maps on the Earthmate PN-20

May 28, 2008

This weekend will find Team DeLorme taking part in our fourth annual Sunday River Training Ride… a two-day, 150-mile round trip ride from DeLorme in Yarmouth, ME to the Jordan Grand Hotel at Sunday River Ski Resort in Bethel, ME. Each year I ride with my Earthmate PN-20 to help with directions, record my track, and provide trip statistics to keep us on schedule. This year I will be adding color aerial imagery of Sunday River and turning on a new feature, Hybrid Maps, so that I can see the contours on top of the imagery and have a better feel for the terrain.

For those of you who have downloaded the 1.4 firmware update, (hopefully that’s all of you!) the Hybrid Maps option is available in Map Setup. Enabling the option turns off the land cover in the Topo USA data and layers the rest of the Topo USA data on top of the aerial imagery. Translation… it allows you to see the roads, contours, and labels on top of the imagery… very cool for visualizing terrain changes while seeing the details in the imagery. Keep in mind that this feature is only available above the .25 mile scale. Here are a couple of screen shots I took while playing back my track log from last year.

The final leg of the ride is a five mile stretch with over 1000 feet of vertical gain. It was torture after the first 70 miles but very rewarding once we reached the swimming pool! My heart rate hit 189 bpm right around the point in the previous screen shots… check out the change in elevation described in the contour lines– it was pretty steep!

Here’s a zoomed out screen shot showing the golf course where I should have been relaxing… The course is hidden by the trees and last year I couldn’t see it in the Topo USA data or I might have stopped before the 189 heart rate!

When we got back I displayed the track in Topo USA. It allowed me to create some great 3-D views while analyzing the athletic data I gathered with my Suunto heart rate monitor. There’s already a post about using GeoTagger to tie athletic data to a track; check it out if you’d like to learn more about how I profiled my heart rate and speed.

I hope this example of using the Earthmate PN-20 with aerial imagery and the Hybrid Maps option will give you some ideas about how you might use this feature on your own!

-Chip


Using the PN-20 and Topo USA for Bike Training Rides

April 4, 2008

For all you cyclists and athletic device owners out there, I’d like to share with you how I use my Earthmate PN-20 and Suunto T6 heart rate monitor with Topo USA 7.0 during the training season.

I captain a group of employees, friends, and family that ride as Team DeLorme in the Maine Lung Association’s Trek Across Maine each year. The Trek is a three day, 180 mile ride from the mountains to the sea — it’s quite an event.

There is also a hardcore group of riders, some of us training for the Trek, that gets together each Thursday night for a friendly but competitive hammer fest (fast ride for you non-biking readers). We had our second group ride last night. Seven riders made it out; we put in 26 miles, averaging 16 mph. Not too bad for early season spinning… especially considering there’s still snow on the ground here in Maine!

I use the Earthmate PN-20 and my Suunto T6 heart rate monitor to record athletic data during the ride that I can later view in Topo USA. Here’s a photo of the three devices I use when I’m training. The PN-20 is on the left, my Flight Deck is in the middle, and my Suunto T6 heart rate monitor is on the right.

I know, I know — you’d never put that much weight on your road bike. I get harassed by the purists here at work all the time. Keep in mind that this is my training setup; it’s what I use to track my GPS location, record my heart rate data and monitor my cadence when I’m not worried about ounces and wind resistance. I’m also involved with too many outdoor activities to buy a specialized GPS device for cycling. There are some great units that capture GPS, heart rate, and cadence all in a nice little package, but they are expensive and can’t do the other things I need. I consider my PN-20 to be an all purpose device. I use it for cycling, geocaching, upland hunting, and driving.

Sorry — I had to address that issue, as it’s a barrier to the rest of this discussion for some riders. Perhaps these screen shots will also show you why I like to have the device with me. The screen shot on the left shows the Map Page with the info field configuration that I like to use. The screen shot on the right shows the Trip Info Page that I switch to when I want extra information.

 

The most powerful tool that we use during the training season is actually Topo USA. One of our co-workers has a gift for stringing together hill climbs… he uses the route and profile tools to plan each ride. We also added cycling features to Topo 7 that show proper trip times and avoid toll roads. When he’s finished, he sends them to us as DeLorme transfer files or posts them as MapShare links. Here’s last night’s ride… 

DeLorme MapShare

I take the route file that he sends and load it on my PN-20. Before the ride starts, I clear my track and trip info statistics to get a clean track file at the end. I also start logging with my Suunto T6, which I keep calibrated to GPS time for easy syncing after the ride using Topo’s GeoTagger. The PN-20 displays GPS location, trip, turn, and finish distances; the Flight Deck displays speed and cadence; and the Suunto T6 displays heart rate, trip time, and the clock time I’m on the road. I don’t have to touch anything during the ride and I have all the data I need to keep myself in a good training zone and prevent boredom during long rides.

When I finish the ride, I save my track on the PN-20 and my athletic data log on the Suunto T6 and then store the data in my 2008 Training Season project in Topo 7. I have each track stored as a separate file and can use those files with GeoTagger, the new Topo 7 feature I mentioned earlier, to link the location information from the PN-20 to the heart rate data from the Suunto T6. You can actually do this with any heart rate monitor that has the ability to output data as a text file. We’ve created special paths for Suunto and Timex, and we support direct import from the Garmin athletic devices.

Once I’ve finished using GeoTagger to combine the track and the athletic data, I can use the Profile tool to view my altimeter elevation, wheel speed, and heart rate. If I had a cadence sensor or temperature sensor, I could view that data as well. The screen shot below shows the track log over satellite imagery on the left and Topo USA data on the right. You can see the red profile line representing my heart rate, the blue profile representing speed, and the green profile representing elevation.

The info box covering the profile shows statistics for that section of the graph and highlights the location on the map. You can see how that particular climb got my heart pumping pretty fast. Clearly, there’s some work to do before the group rides strike out for the real hill sessions! Check back for more athletic data posts from Team DeLorme rides throughout the season.

-Chip