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A Look At OpenStreetMap’s TIGER Data Exported To A Garmin GPS



Rich at GPS Tracklog cites OpenStreetMap’s recently-completed importation of the TIGER road data for the US, and challenges me to take a look at exporting it to a Garmin GPS (based on this post, I assume). OK, sure.

TIGER is a dataset produced by the US Census; from the website:

The TIGER/Line files are a digital database of geographic features, such as roads, railroads, rivers, lakes, legal boundaries, census statistical boundaries, etc. covering the entire United States. The data base contains information about these features such as their location in latitude and longitude, the name, the type of feature, address ranges for most streets, the geographic relationship to other features, and other related information. They are the public product created from the Census Bureau’s TIGER database.

TIGER data was originally intended to aid the official US Census, mandated every 10 years by the US Constitution. For those purposes, the data didn’t need to be created with an exceptionally high degree of accuracy, and it wasn’t. While the US Census is working on improving the spatial accuracy of the data, it isn’t complete or fully accurate yet, and you should keep that in mind if you plan to use the data for navigation.

The process for downloading OpenStreetMap (OSM) data and converting it to Garmin’s .img format is unchanged from this post, though you should make sure you have the latest versions of both the JOSM and mkgmap applications (as I discovered, older versions may not work). I downloaded data from my neighborhood, and overlaid it on top of an aerial photo:

test

Most of the streets that actually exist are mapped in TIGER, and the topology is accurate, but you can see that for a fair number of streets, the TIGER data doesn’t match exactly. In addition, there are some streets missing (see the upper-left hand corner), and also some roads plotted that don’t actually exist (mid to lower left-hand corner). But that’s not just a problem with TIGER; while Google Earth shows the roads in the upper-left-hand-corner correctly, it also plots those non-existent roads on the left as well. And using the JOSM application, you can correct a map, adding or deleting features, then upload those corrections to the OpenStreetMap project (though when I tried, the process hung on me).

Here are screenshots of some of this TIGER road data loaded into my Garmin on the left, and the corresponding area in MetroGuide 4 loaded on the right:

OSM Metroguide
OSM TIGER Data Garmin MetroGuide Data

There are minor differences between the two, including labeling and road shapes. Driving around my neighborhood with both maps, it was clear that the Garmin data was more accurate than the OSM positionally, even though it’s substantially older (circa 2001). And OSM data doesn’t offer autorouting, as does MetroGuide 4 and the newer Garmin CityNavigator products. Still, the OSM data is more than good enough to let you navigate an area, you can’t beat the price, and you can help the OpenStreetMap project fix the accuracy issues yourself by correcting the map and uploading the changes.

sf Actual screenshot
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sf Actual screenshot

Other posts in the Garmin GPS series

  1. Garmin microSD Card Tricks
  2. Exporting Data From Garmin’s MapSource Program To Google Earth
  3. Free Garmin GPS Unit Auto-Routing With MetroGuide Maps + Free European Basemap
  4. Cheap Worldwide Road And Contour Maps For Garmin GPS Units
  5. Converting A Garmin USB GPS Connection To Multiple Serial NMEA Connections
  6. Converting OpenStreetMap Data Into GPX Or Garmin .img Format
  7. Adding Garmin .img Map Files To MapSource
  8. Sources For Free Garmin .img GPS Map Files
  9. Beta Version Of DNRGarmin
  10. Google Maps Search Interface For Garmin .img Maps
  11. High-Res Garmin Topo Maps For CO, WY, and UT (also Argentina, Uruguay and Chile)
  12. Creating Custom Waypoint Icons For Garmin GPS Units I
  13. Creating Custom Waypoint Icons For Garmin GPS Units II
  14. Creating Custom Waypoint Icons For Garmin GPS Units III - Custom Waypoint Icons In MapSource
  15. Garmin Handheld GPS Units That Support Custom Waypoints
  16. Garmin MapSource For Free
  17. Garmin GPS Unit Waypoint Icons Table
  18. A Look At OpenStreetMap’s TIGER Data Exported To A Garmin GPS
  19. Beating The Garmin 2025-Map Limit With US Topo Maps
  20. High-Res Garmin Topo Maps Now Out For Utah
  21. Introduction To Garmin GPS Custom POI (Points Of Interest) Data
  22. Garmin Topo Maps For Montana And California
  23. Creating A Garmin Custom POI Datafile
  24. Managing Custom POI Data On A Garmin Handheld GPS
  25. Creating Custom Icons For Garmin Points Of Interest (POI)
  26. Creating A Garmin GPS Points Of Interest (POI) File From A Point Shapefile
  27. Entering Multiple Datasets For A Single Set Of Garmin Custom POIs
  28. AZ Garmin Topo Maps And More From The GPS File Depot
  29. Updates For Two Garmin-Related Programs
  30. Put USGS Topographic Maps, Aerial Imagery, And Other Raster Imagery On Your Garmin Handheld GPS
  31. New Garmin Map Links At The GPS File Depot
  32. Sets Of Custom Garmin Waypoint Icons
  33. Converting Raster Maps To Garmin Vector Format With BMap2MP
  34. Updates At The GPS File Depot
  35. Uploading .img Map Files To A Garmin GPS Unit With MapUpload
  36. Make Your Own Topo Maps For A Garmin GPS Unit
  37. Garmin Map Roundup
  38. Uploading .img Map Files to A Garmin GPS Unit With IMG2GPS
  39. Updates On The Garmin 1:24K US Topographic Map Front


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2 Responses to “A Look At OpenStreetMap’s TIGER Data Exported To A Garmin GPS”


  1. 1 Ben Mathews

    Works great, thanks.

  2. 2 Gavin

    I’ve used TIGER data over the years in GIS and found that in some rural areas, it can be spot on or egregiously wrong, but quite imaginative. So buyer beware, I guess. Not really different than the reguritated TIGER pay-to-map data in MapSource and MapSend for Magellan.

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