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Dennis, a pilot and Manager of Special
Operations (overseeing firefighting, disaster relief,
incident response and security services) for Evergreen
Helicopters International Inc, a worldwide company
headquartered in McMinnville, OR wrote in with the
following story:
I am using an iFINDER GPS while working
on a Space Shuttle Columbia Recovery Team. I use
the iFINDER as my primary source of tracking my grid
pattern. We have recovered several pieces of the
shuttle and are currently working a grid directly under
the shuttle's flight path which means we will probably
find more items as we continue our search. Recently, I
also used my iFINDER to locate a helicopter that was
stranded in an East Texas National Forest. All I had
was a lat/lon to work with, but with the iFINDER I was
able to follow the map on screen and navigate directly to
the aircraft by way of county roads deep into the
interior of the forest. I'm going to request that
all of the company support vehicles have an iFINDER on
board.
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| Dennis with his iFINDER mounted in a Bell 206-L III
Long Ranger helicopter |
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Alejandro, a Lowrance employee,
accompanied by his sister, his father and his GlobalMap
100 made the four day trek to the summit of this 3,095
meters high mountain in Baja California
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John Hamer sent in the following
story:
Here's one for the book, fishing in the
Southern North Sea out of Bradwell on sea last spring
with my mate Dave. Had located and returned to a
wreck on several occasions using the LMS-350A but on this
occasion a lively smoothhound took one of our rods for a
swim and it was last seen flying out over the transom
into 40 feet of turgid Thames Estuary water. This
is a usual happening at this time of year and my own
fault for not securing the rod in the rest.
However, we became the laughing stock of the rest of the
lads and had to wear it. Ten days later we fished
the same wreck and believe it or not Dave hooked up with
the missing rod on this first cast. It was
recovered intact only requiring a wash and oiling to put
it back into service. The mockers did not want accept
this story but when we produced the rod had to.
They put it down to pure luck, but we put it down to the
excellent returnability of of Lowrance GPS system, and
maybe just a little lady luck.
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Jamey glides down the Illinois river near
Talequaha, Oklahoma. Jamey uses his GlobalMap 100
to map his entry and exit points on the river, which is
very helpful when coordinating drop off and pick up
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While this stretch of the Illinois is not
known for its whitewater, Jamey does manage to catch a
few waves.
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