I think my Nuvi 5000 is good. I have to tell it the route I want since it doesn't do truck routing but it has a built in audio book reader, mp3 player, FM transmitter AND doubles as a video display for my DVD player. That was a nice feature while sitting in the truck waiting.
Who here has a good GPS?
Discussion in 'Trucking Electronics, Gadgets and Software Forum' started by crabby125s girl, Aug 31, 2009.
Page 3 of 7
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
Thus my good friend, at least at this time, they are all "non-truck" solutions until further notice. Not only that, but some of them seem to have an exorbitant number of issues that require you to have a high speed Internet connection while you are on the road because of the size of the downloads, and how many drivers on the road have access to high speed Internet connections? Thus buyers should beware before they pluck down their hard earned cash for one of these over priced car GPS units with enhanced truck specific features.
-
Please refer to the following Website for a honest review.
http://www.dieselboss.com/truck_gps_review_features.htm
What I have gathered is that you have read through two threads and based upon what you have read have come to some odd conclusions.
A lot of time and research has gone into these higher priced navigation units. They simply cannot use normal car type mapping and be an affective navigation unit. The software coding has to take a lot more into account to provide you the driver a safe legal truck route.
I posted that high speed internet on the road is needed if the user wishes to update while on the road. When was the last time you tried to download a file of about 1mb on a dial up connection? A lot more drivers have access to the internet than you think. Almost all of the major truck stops have High speed internet, McDonalds has high speed internet and they are usually found at truck stops. I was on the road for three years and I never lacked for a high speed connection.
As far as issues with the navigation unit, I am being fair to the user whom has purchased this unit so if a issue is found that will affect their driving then they can be aware of it. I think most drivers would appreciate that we are being honest with them.
Thanks,
MarkLast edited: Dec 18, 2009
-
Until recently, I was using an $80 TomTom. I'm not willing to spend $500, just seems crazy expensive. When truck GPS comes down to $200 I'll reconsider. The main advantage of a GPS for me is seeing the name of an upcoming road. During rain, snow or night, it's invaluable. Being able to find your current location with a simple touch of the screen, nomatter where you stop, makes breaks easier. And knowing which direction you'll be turning helps keep you in the proper lane ahead of time. Even without truck routing, you won't know how you ever lived without a GPS once you start using one.
-
-
I also got the Rand McNally TND500 unit. True it was $500 but if you want a truck specific gps which you really need as a trucker and pretty soon from what i see in some states you can be fined for using a non-truck unit ( i heard in NJ or NY i think are gonna do this ) you are going to have to spend that. The Garmin,World Nav, Cobra are also about $500 each. PC Miler is only one cheaper and to get the one with the bigger screen not that much less. I'm very happy with my unit and hasn't let me down yet!
-
-
I agree the wi-fi out there can be expensive and lots of times has a weak signal BUT.....i think the important issue is what gps unit out there (car or truck) can you update WITHOUT internet connection? most units you have to pay and only updated once or twice a year. if updates are free ill find internet somewhere. true some units you can get updated by sd card but theyre not cheap!
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 3 of 7