All you really need to finish any rally is a good bike,
Guess a good pedal bike would be sufficient to finish a lot of 24 hour rally's.
The MD 20-20 and the MM1K only require you to bag one bonus to be considered a finisher. A regular bonus at the MD 20-20 is to get the address of the diner across the street from the host hotel. Another is Jim Young's grave at Indian Town gap cemetary about 10 miles away, and so on.
I would'nt think of running one without my 2610. I did one with a Garmin V and the lack of memory was very frustrating. Maybe the bonuses are harder to find back east.
Directions in a rally book can suck!
At the MD 20-20 2-day this year, Rick through in a last minute "plug", that I considered to be absolutely necessary to my route. It took me and another guy almost an hour just to figure out the general location with two laptop's running S&T's, his Streetpilot III, and my 2610. That was before we even got our helmet's on.
Once we got to the area, well.... The detail in a 2610 is amazing. About 5 miles into a goatpath in central PA there was a fork in the trail. My GPS new which way to go. Amazing. No paper map in the world would have helped, unless of course you carry a Delorme book for each state. I think we visited 9 states in all in that rally.
I lost 40 minutes in the 05 MM1K because I decided to try to follow the directions in the book to West Quaco, NB. Once I realized I was going the wrong way and keyed the loc into Mr. Garmin I got back on track.
With 2 hours to the finish the gps said I had two minutes to spare. I checked in with two minutes to spare. Using a paper map alone would not have gotten me back in time.
You really need to keep your paper maps handy, however. All to often a gps will send you down a "shortcut" that will shave a mile off your route when you should have stayed on the highway and saved 30 minutes. Got the chance to see the ghetto in Richmond, VA at 3:00 AM tho :bigeyes: They need to be used with one another.
Abviously folks here with better rally results than I, can do without, but if your gonna be cutting it close, a gps and a laptop are essential. I think I could have had first in the Minuteman if I had utilized the gps up in canada instead of relying on someone elses directions.
A GPS and a bunch of good maps are much more important than a fuel cell. At least on the east coast where there is plenty of gas. Usually
Just my opinion of course.