:confused: For the life of me I can't seem to find the icon that will tell me how many miles are in the track I have created.
Thanks In Advance
Just to be clear, it is the stopped time vs. moving time that is important, not the values for leg distance in the property column (at one time BaseCamp was or still is trying to use a similar filter and thus not using all the leg distances to calculate total distance). If you are constantly moving, then the stopped will zero or close to zero and will have little affect on the total distance. Under these circumstances, it is the total number of points that become important.
Let’s say the trip computer showed no stopped time. In that case the total number of points used to determine the total distance will be the elapsed time in seconds. Now if the interval for the track log is set to anything other time 1 second, there will be far fewer points used to calculate the total distance (half or fewer).
Remember, that the gps system does not give absolute positions. If you were to walk a perfectly straight line the track will show you drifting to the left and right. The net result is a greater accumulation of error with more data points. In general, with no stopped time, you would expect to see a shorter distance with fewer data points. As long as no curves are cut off, then fewer points will likely be a more accurate estimate of the distance covered.
There is another issue that I have noticed with respect to the summary statistics reported from the device. This is just a foggy recollection with respect to the current track log. It seems to me that that the total mileage is using either the first data point in the current log or perhaps the value in the meta data portion of the gpx log. Or perhaps it uses the last location prior to turning of the device as the initial location for the trip computer.
In fact, I have seen the total distance on a track of over 700 miles in the statistical header for a track that could not be longer than 20 miles. And I am not talking about a long line going back to some far away location. Simply deleting a point in the middle of the track reduced it to ca. 16 miles.
I haven’t really examined it to try and figure out what is going on, nor do I know if saving the track vs. grabbing it from the current track log would make a difference. The best practice for capturing tracks you are interested in is to have your device up and running for ~ 10-15 minutes, clear the trip computer and track log just before you start and save the track when you finish. I won’t guarantee good results, but it should avoid some of the quirky results/behavior while Garmin works the kinks out of this new feature.