Off road navigation is one of the most important parts of any trip. With the aid of your computer, a navigation program, and a GPS, you can plot out the best trails to take in order to see as many things as possible, and make sure that you remain on target.
For our travels, the criteria for our GPS included, water/dust resistance, rugged construction, significant coordinate/route capacity, ports for computer connections, a daylight readable screen, a decent size screen viewable from the drivers seat, sufficient memory for map downloads, and good acquisition time. It also helped to find a unit that could serve as a backup handheld GPS, in the event of a failure of the usual hiking unit. Finding a GPS that met all of these criteria took some time, a lot of research, and eventually a healthy purchase price.
The choice ended up being the Garmin 276C, and as it turned out, it was right on the money. Unfortunately, advances in technology seem to sound the eventual death knell for just about all electronic gizmos, and the 276C, was no exception. Several years ago, the 276C was discontinued, but despite this, it's intensely loyal following wouldn't give up. The current popularity of the 276C, despite being discontinued, is evident from the price that used units are commanding. For a model in reasonably good condition, sellers are getting prices that are higher than the retail price of years ago, back when they were still being manufactured.
Garmin, apparently recognizing this popularity, has now come around and offered essentially the same model, with all the necessary current technology, in a new model designated the 276Cx. The new 276Cx, is similar in appearance, size and function and does everything that the older model did, but it now has many additional features that make it even more attractive to the off-roader. Garmin describes the 276Cx as an "all terrain GPS navigator" and their website gives an excellent description of its features, functions, capabilities, and, of course, its price, see:
https://buy.garmin.com/en-US/US/p/539722.
The following article describes the older model 276C as, "the best overlanding navigation GPS device ever made." I agree. The author also examines the new 276Cx and how it compares to the older model. Good reading:
http://www.exploringoverland.com/overla ... df97968103 .
Perhaps, if you have been very, very good during the last year, you might be lucky enough to find one of these under the tree.
From the Garmin website:

- Garmin 276Cx.jpg (214.8 KiB) Viewed 930 times