I understand how the context sensitive menus work.
So, are you say that, yes, the only way to stop navigating to a way point is to be in a plotter screen, move the cursor to the waypoint, initiate the context sensitive menu and select STOP? If so, that's REALLY cumbersome. Even the older 1650/1850 had a way to access STOP NAVIGATING, using button pushes. Moving the cursor along can be difficult on a rocking boat.
I have discovered that when you select PLOT from the list of points that the cursor appears to default directly on the point. So it is a simply matter of hitting ENTER to choose STOP (navigating). However, I don't believe that you are actually navigating towards the point; it is just plotting it on the chart for you to see.
But if you choose GO TO in the POINTS menu, the cursor is offset from the point and you must move the cursor onto the point to be able to hit ENTER and access the STOP (navigating) option.
Upon further review, if you have already hit GO TO and are navigating to the point, you can go into the POINTS list, select the active point and then choose PLOT. This will put the cursor on the point, even if you are in the GO TO state. Then, just hit ENTER and you get the context sensitive menu for the point because the cursor is directly on the point. Again, a bit cumbersome.
It would make much more sense if STOP was an option when you select a way point that is active in the POINTS list, even though that is still a series of button pushes and roto-key rotations.
Anyone else find any other ways of terminating the navigation to a point?