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The Nav Bead packs a lot of features into a very compact design which is almost unnoticeable when carried.Very accurate for its size, the 20mm diameter compass was specially designed for the Nav Bead and is a far cry from many other 'button' compasses available. It is tough, shockproof and built to GSA-compliant specifications.Equally capable of both day and night navigation thanks to the very best in photoluminescent GITD (glow-in-the-dark) materials. The compass and direction line are easily readable in the dark, and just a few seconds of light from a flashlight will 'recharge' them. The 20mm GITD lamp provides gentle illumination for map reading at night, which will preserve your night-adapted vision, unlike the glare when using a flashlight. When worn around the neck, the GITD lamp acts as a highly visible personal marker, ideal for showing your position to others on a night trek.Included are 14 'pace counting beads' also known as 'ranger beads'. These facilitate a simple military technique of recording distance travelled along a route, by counting your paces and sliding the beads to record every 100m and kilometer travelled.Another feature the Nav Bead packs in is the cord itself, which can be used for map work. For example: to measure curved and straight distances on the map, or to find headings or locations on the map. The cord can also be held out to form a 'sighting line' when taking a bearing to obtain more accuracy.The whole Nav Bead is extremely durable with an oil and seawater-resistant construction.The Nav Bead comes in a plastic storage case and includes an instruction sheet detailing the uses of the Nav Bead for basic navigation and map work.Nav Bead dimensions: 35mm x 27mm x 18mm. Cord length: 400mm loop (800mm total). Weight (without pace beads): 11.5g.
D**Y
A very effective new piece of kit
I have owned the previous version of the Nav Bead for quite a while now but was impressed by the trial version of the new model when Luke, one of the directors of Polymath, sent me a picture of him testing it in Australia, so I was waiting for its release with some anticipation.As soon as I saw it on Polymaths Amazon.co.uk products page I ordered 2 – one of each type of cord - and, as usual with Polymath, they arrived on the next working day. The kit comes in a useful plastic box with a set of pace counter beads and an easy to follow set of instructions and advice. The following weekend I took one out to a local open area, along with a 1-25,000 map, oriented the map using the compass and then decided on a simple route for testing the kit.I laid out the attached cord between each leg of the walk in turn and used the compass to plot the relevant bearings, then used the cord to measure the distances on the map to my target points and against the yardage scale. From much practise over the years, I am familiar with my stride length on differing types of ground and degrees of slope so I then easily converted the distances to paces and made a note of them for each stage.Using my notes, I set the compass to the correct bearing for the first leg of the walk, but since the target point was a stream junction and I didn't want to miss it and not know which way it was from where I'd arrived, I actually aimed off a hundred paces upstream of the junction on the nearest stream, knowing that when I hit the stream I would then need to simply head down with the flow to my target. I stretched out the cord and used it to sight on an appropriate landmark on my chosen bearing, and set off on course. As I walked I used the beads on the cord to note each ten and hundred paces of the 350 required for that leg. When I got to the stream I turned and started to count my paces to the stream junction. It was actually 108 rather than 100 but using a button compass, and since I'm a bit out of practise, I reckoned that was well within the limit of acceptability for the distance covered. Each of the following stages of the walk was similarly accurate; sometimes my calculations were a bit over sometimes under my original calculation but I hit each target point and reached my destination without any problems.I later took the set out in the dark to check the luminosity of the compass and bead. Inevitably after several hours of darkness the brightness does deteriorate and I have attached one of the tiny emergency light sources from a Polymath mini survival tin to up the glow when required, but after a day worn in the open the luminous bead remains viable for map reading for several hours, so Polymath’s pictures are accurate, and just a short exposure to torch light recharges it enough for more hours use, giving a massive saving on battery life of the emergency light.Accurate navigation with a button compass is never as easy or precise as with a larger model, but with proper application of appropriate techniques Polymath’s new product will certainly help you to get safely from one point to another, even in an emergency. The extra features of the NavBead would make that simpler and more reliable under a wide range of conditions and whether you were in a wilderness, rural or urban environment. On my next outing I'll use one again but over more difficult ground and with at least one walk in the dark. Lack of visible landmarks to aim for while walking can make that much more difficult of course and requires some different techniques but it will be another test of the viability of what, from the results of this first test, promises to be a very effective piece of kit.
J**P
Nicely thought out bit of kit....
This compass really needs some praise because there has been some really good clever thought gone into this. Everything you would expect to glow in the dark does and its all put together in a nice package. I would say the most important part of this tool, is the compass itself and it is a very nice one too compared to some small one i have had.. The whole kit seems robust enough to be squaddie proof and the only change I would make (because I wouldnt want to pop the compass housing a part) is an easy break in the cord seeing as it is nice cord and unlikely to snap if caught up accidently. I will be using adhesive lined heatshrink to create this mainly as it is for my 12 year old nephew. I doubt he would use the pacer beads but they are a nice addition. All in all for the price and quality of this item, I highly recommend it as certainly a back up but with all the features it has could quite easily be used for keeping an eye on direction day or night (once heading is established) accurately rather than keep grabbing the silva. Well impressed. Thank you Polymath.
P**K
A good secondary compass.
This is one of a very few small compasses on the market, that actually works ! I have alot of experience with compasses, and the role I would use this in when out walking, would be as a "Howgozit" checker. In that I would have planned a route and know what headings to go on using a protractor/main compass. Then when walking the route use this as a confidence checker. The ranger beads are a good inclusion, and its night capability after a quick "light up" is pretty good too. A small, but genuinely good range of products from this company, happy to recommend both.
W**D
Pretty cool and fun product
I thought I'd add something cool and useful to my edc. This just jumped out at me and looked like a fun product.For the money it looks great and can't really complain. The pace counter could certainly be useful. The compass certainly points towards magnetic sources - not sure I'm hitting north as there's plenty of sources that seem to be confusing it right now. Speakers and just discovered a small electric motor I forgot I had :)The glow in the dark fades rapidly. Maybe I need to charge it up for a while. I hit it up with a UV torch and it glows brightly, but not for long. Odd thing is that it comes in a black plastic case that would keep it in the dark, so not helping. I'll be tying it onto a zipper on a backpack so it's always in day light.
T**R
Good little back up compass for night small boat and hiking
Slightly larger than other “buttonhole” compasses I have attached to waterproof rucksacks, but light rechargeable cord and compass card an improvement on what I have already.Pace beads could be useful entering a strange channel or river, easy way to count off navigation bouys/waypoints/turns without having to leave the helm in bad visibility to tick off on chart/passage plan.
J**E
Handy
Not bad as button-compasses go; reasonably fast, but not orienteering compass fast. It’s the format that’s a real winner.As a backup and quick direction indicator, it’s great, and the lume is a really handy feature for this who do 24 hr events.Like all compasses, remember to keep it well away form mobile phones and headphones... devices with magnets will screw up your compass.
P**S
Polymath compass kit
Great bit of kit with florecent lanyard , hold a torch on the compass and it will activate the florescence so you can read a map in the dark with the compass also comes with pacing beads 9 at the top 5 at the bottom so you know where u are accuratley excellent price these are not just a back up but are an excellent accurate bit of kit
M**.
British made quality guranteed
A brilliant piece of quality kit solidly built. The bright glowing back is great for reading a map at night without destroying night vision. The box it comes in is great for carrying a mini fishing kit in, everything is a bonus.
S**.
Kann es nur weiterempfehlen
Ein sehr guter Kompass. Richtet sich schnell und präzise aus. Das Band könnte länger sein, da wenn die Kugeln eingefädelt sind, man es nicht mehr anlegen kann.
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