December Production Updates

by brett December 02, 2010

Wow! It's been just over a month since we launched the Bad Elf GPS, and the customer demand has been extremely strong. It's been fun hearing what our customers are doing with these things - flying everything from commercial jets to homebuilt aircraft, hiking, geocaching, golfing, even preparing for a 3-month trek through Mongolia next summer.

At this time we are completely out of stock.

The next production run is in progress and we expect to have new inventory by the end of December 2010. If we are lucky, it may be in time for Christmas, but we are not holding our collective breath expecting that to happen. We are dependent on too many external factors to be able to push that date.

We have taken down our Amazon and eBay listings until we have an exact re-stock date from our contract manufacturer. In the meantime, if you'd like to get a Bad Elf GPS as soon as they are available, please sign up for our email notification list via the Store page.

And, finally, thanks to all of our customers for your orders, emails, reviews, etc. We're very excited about 2011 with lots more exciting stuff to come!





brett
brett

Author


Leave a comment

Comments will be approved before showing up.


Also in Blog

Wireless avionics database updates, powered by Jeppesen and Bad Elf
Wireless avionics database updates, powered by Jeppesen and Bad Elf

by Brett Hackleman April 11, 2018

View full article →

A Cost Effective Method for Capturing High Accuracy Ground Control
A Cost Effective Method for Capturing High Accuracy Ground Control

by Larry Fox August 23, 2017

View full article →

Affordable High-Accuracy GPS for Education

by Larry Fox October 25, 2016

Obtaining high quality geographic information systems (GIS) data depends on effective field data collection. Poor field collection wastes labor resources and ultimately undermines the value of your GIS database.

GPS receiver capabilities range from survey grade (centimeter level accuracy) to consumer grade (~5-meter level accuracy). Of course, this demands a cost-benefit tradeoff ranging from free to prohibitively expensive for most educational institutions. Between these two extremes lies mapping grade GPS, which delivers 1 meter accuracy.

View full article →