Me and my group have tried a number of golf GPS units. Finding a unit that's not complete garbage is difficult at under $200. Trying to find a model closeout is probably your best bet.It is a bit over $200 but the Callaway uPro Go is a pretty good unit.
It comes preloaded with 17,000 courses. No subscription required. If I had to buy one today this is a serious contender.
The downside is to get the "Go" mode which is the cool feature is a one time upgrade of $50. You are looking at about $300 total with the upgrade which is still a pretty good price. There is also the uPro model which is the original that has a nice scorecard & stat tracking function but the downloading the pro version of courses is $8-10 each.
Personally I use a SkyCaddie from SkyGolf. In side by side testing with a couple of other units the SkyCaddies were more accurate. They are the only company that has a staff that goes and walks every course instead of measuring satellite images.
The SG2.5 lite is $200. The SG3.5 is on closeout for $199 and the SG4 is closing out for $150 at tgw.com. SkyCaddie does have an annual membership which is annoying, the upside is that you know what your costs are going to be.
Me and my group have tried a number of golf GPS units. Finding a unit that's not complete garbage is difficult at under $200. Trying to find a model closeout is probably your best bet.
It is a bit over $200 but the Callaway uPro Go is a pretty good unit. It comes preloaded with 17,000 courses. No subscription required.
If I had to buy one today this is a serious contender. The downside is to get the "Go" mode which is the cool feature is a one time upgrade of $50. You are looking at about $300 total with the upgrade which is still a pretty good price.
There is also the uPro model which is the original that has a nice scorecard & stat tracking function but the downloading the pro version of courses is $8-10 each. Personally I use a SkyCaddie from SkyGolf. In side by side testing with a couple of other units the SkyCaddies were more accurate.
They are the only company that has a staff that goes and walks every course instead of measuring satellite images. The SG2.5 lite is $200. The SG3.5 is on closeout for $199 and the SG4 is closing out for $150 at tgw.com.
SkyCaddie does have an annual membership which is annoying, the upside is that you know what your costs are going to be. Me and my group have tried a number of golf GPS units. Finding a unit that's not complete garbage is difficult at under $200.
Trying to find a model closeout is probably your best bet. It is a bit over $200 but the Callaway uPro Go is a pretty good unit. It comes preloaded with 17,000 courses.
No subscription required. If I had to buy one today this is a serious contender. The downside is to get the "Go" mode which is the cool feature is a one time upgrade of $50.
You are looking at about $300 total with the upgrade which is still a pretty good price. There is also the uPro model which is the original that has a nice scorecard & stat tracking function but the downloading the pro version of courses is $8-10 each. Personally I use a SkyCaddie from SkyGolf.
In side by side testing with a couple of other units the SkyCaddies were more accurate. They are the only company that has a staff that goes and walks every course instead of measuring satellite images. The SG2.5 lite is $200.
The SG3.5 is on closeout for $199 and the SG4 is closing out for $150 at tgw.com. SkyCaddie does have an annual membership which is annoying, the upside is that you know what your costs are going to be.
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