• This community needs YOUR help today!

    With the ever-increasing fees of maintaining our vibrant community (servers, software, domains, email), we need help.
    We need more Supporting Members today.

    Please invest back into this community to help spread our love and knowledge of multi-channel sound.

    Why Join?

    • Exclusive Access: Gain entry to private forums.
    • Special Perks: Enjoy enhanced account features that enrich your experience, including the ability to disable ads.
    • Free Gifts: Sign up annually and receive exclusive The Rocketry Forum decals directly to your door!

    This is your chance to make a difference. Become a Supporting Member today:

    Upgrade Now

iArrow on iOS is dead (bearing/range to coordinates app) ... any replacements out there?

The Rocketry Forum

Help Support The Rocketry Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

GrouchoDuke

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 18, 2016
Messages
1,693
Reaction score
1,537
To keep from lugging around receivers, antennas & wires when hunting for rockets, I used to just enter the coordinates into the iOS app called iArrow and let my iPhone point me which way to go. It looks like that app hasn't been updated in long enough that Apple removed it (or maybe the developer removed it...either way, it's dead). Does anyone have another recommendation for an iPhone app where I can enter a lat/long and have my phone tell me where to go?

Full disclosure: I have a GPS-related app called GPS Location, but I wrote it to only find locations of things (specifically, what coordinates I should enter into my telescope when I was camping with my telescope at some dark sky site). If there isn't anything good out there, I might have to update it or maybe make something new that works as a "finder" app.

Any recommendations? Thanks!
 
Cool, thanks! I just grabbed that. It's more cumbersome than iArrow was, but it works. I’ll keep my eyes out for other options too.
 
Yeah, I guess I didn’t look hard enough to get around it. When an app puts up a giant “REGISTER TO CONTINUE,” maybe I should have my shields up a little more.
 
Back
Top