My brother is an O/O and recently got a Rand McNally 720 and couldn't be happier with it. He saved up points on his Pilot/Flying J card for over a year and paid for it off his points.
Do trucking companies furnish a GPS?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by jungledrums, Dec 18, 2013.
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Thanks everyone. I already have the Rand McNally laminated version.
I want a good gps for only as an aid.
Thanks for the tip about google maps.
Please let me know of any other apps that are handy to use.
Our first week of cdl school was spent on map reading, pre trip planningCondoCruiser Thanks this. -
... and be VERY careful if you miss a turn and ask the GPS system to Reroute you...
... MANY is the time that option has taken me into truck restricted residential areas, asked me to make 120º right turns into dirt alley's, asked me to drive PAST my destination and get on the freeway to take an exit and turn around and come BACK to the exit to my destination, routed me onto an unpaved road during a driving rainstorm into "gumbo dirt" in Alabama, etc. etc. etc.
Best thing if you missed your turn is to find a safe place to STOP, ask for the reroute, THEN get onto Google Maps and figure out if the new route is safe or the best route.jungledrums Thanks this. -
Microsoft Streets and Trips with the Truck Stops Plus add-on (http://www.truckstopsplus.com/) is nice if you want something for the PC. A lot of users also like CoPilot (http://copilotgps.com/us/truck/), it is available on a lot of different platforms (iPhone, iPad, Android, Windows, Windows Mobile).
There are lots of options available but none are perfect. Probably best to consult 2 or more when doing your trip planning.Last edited: Dec 18, 2013
jungledrums Thanks this. -
We have the Smart Truck Route app on our phones. We use it sometimes. It's only $40 for a year.
jungledrums Thanks this. -
Lol, it has a power button. I forgot that, mine had a picture viewer where you could upload pictures on it. You know how some hang pictures up. It also had a built in MP3 player where you could load songs as it was hooked directly to the stereo.
It also had a Pilot, Loves and Flying J icon. You pressed on one of them and it would tell you where everyone of them were starting with the closest. I liked that feature along with the yellow pages built in. I could find any restaurant in the area and get food delivered to my truck. I'll never forget a China man delivered me some take out in his broken English he said "Ohhhhh, I never deliver big truck before".
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1/2 a mile? That's it?

Hell, I've had deliveries I've had to drive backwards for 2 miles to get to. Some folks have no business shopping on the internet.
But don't rely too much on a GPS. It WILL let you down eventually, by running into either the 10 foot bridge or tye 10 ton bridge.jungledrums Thanks this. -
10 foot bridge = bad
10 ton bridge floor it and hope for the best -
My company uses Teletracs which puts a GPS unit in each truck that doubles as a message system and tattletale.. Downloads maps on the go through the ATT mobile data network. Does a good job most of the time though the map database does need to be updated more often than it is.
jungledrums Thanks this. -
I ain't about to recommend that to anybody though.
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