It does all depend on a lot of variables. All of which I have posted many times.
Just yesterday though I seen something that floored me a bit. I have been using the stock rubber ducky when walking into the dogs lately, or on the sled. As it fits nicely in my pocket that way. I had just got out of the woods walking out a track. I checked the Garmin to see where my one partner was. I did a double take. Then radioed him to verfiy his location. He did, and I said Holy )*&^%!!! I checked again. Asked him if again if he was moving up a certain road. Yes, was again the answer. Now he wanted to know what was up. From in my truck I was tracking his dogs in the box at 2.6 miles. He looked at his and told me where I was sitting. Was by far the best I have ever seen from the factory rubber ducky. This was a pretty clear day. Partly cloudy, and high clouds.
Now the day before in the same exact area. Clouds were real low. 3" of snow had fallen the night before. Lake effect snow was falling with high winds. Had a hard time tracking much over 1.2 with the longer rubber ducky. had to switch to the portable long range antenna for the first time this winter.
See the difference?? Atmospheric conditions played a huge part in radio communication! Also noticed on these days with our VHF radios both truck and hand held!! Would have been the same with the beep beep stuff. As all radios are affected by the atmoshpere. Part of why us old CB'ers could talk all over the world with the skip. A real pain to try to use a CB radio to hunt with all the skip!
I listened to another group of hunters today having tracking problems. With the beep beep stuff. They could not get much more than a mile. At one point the dogs were 1.3 miles from them. They could not get a beep out of the dogs. They guy with the Garmin knew where they were. These were 219 collars. So perhaps that frequency was being blocked by the atmoshpere today. I did not notice anything today. As I hunted alone, and never got more than 900yds from the dogs.
I will say this about today. The dogs had caught the yote, and were bayed solid. I could hear them pretty good from where I was at. They were just inside of a swamp across the clearing from where I was at. It was 897 yds to the dogs from there. I went down the road to where I was 387 yds from the dogs. When I got out of the truck. I could barely hear a dog at all. Even at 100yds in the thick popple slashing/swamp hole could hardly hear them. So WHAT IS THE POINT OF THIS!!! Without the garmin. I would have walked the 897 yds to the dogs where I could hear them the best. Double the walk in knee deep snow! Thank you Garmin!!!
No radio in the world is not without it's issues, but than again neither am I
