GPS Units

GPS Units What You Need To Know Before You Buy

Instant gps locator Info And Tips

Posted by gps_units on February 2, 2010

I purchased this item to carry along with me on a motorcycle road trip through Glacier National Park, Yellowstone, etc. Every morning I used the “check/OK” feature to let my friends and family know that I was OK. Then I used the “TRACK” feature so that my location would be tracked by satellite every 10 minutes. At the end of the day I was able to go to the SPOT website and view my daily progress.

The unit is compact, lightweight, rugged, and easy to operate. The unit was turned on at the beginning of each day, and remained on for rides in length of 8 hours plus. Never had to replace the batteries or recharge them during the entire 7-day trip.

Data from this unit can be shared with Google Fire Eagle and uploaded to Facebook page to share with friends. I am very pleased with this unit, and would highly recommend it to anyone who is hiking/backpacking, camping, boating, or on a road trip (cycles or car).

garmin-nuvi-750-auto-gps-2010-us+canada-fast-ship GARMIN NUVI 750 AUTO GPS 2010 US+CANADA FAST SHIP
US $139.95 (1 Bid)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:00:19 PST
garmin-nuvi-765t-car-gps-2010-us+can+traffic+free-case GARMIN NUVI 765t CAR GPS 2010 US+CAN+TRAFFIC+FREE CASE
US $184.50 (1 Bid)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:00:22 PST
new-garmin-nuvi-755t-auto-gps-2010-us+can+traffic+bag NEW GARMIN NUVI 755t AUTO GPS 2010 US+CAN+TRAFFIC+BAG
US $186.95
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:00:28 PST
new-garmin-nuvi-755t-auto-gps-2010-us+can+traffic+bag NEW GARMIN NUVI 755t AUTO GPS 2010 US+CAN+TRAFFIC+BAG
US $186.95 (0 Bid)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:00:29 PST

Zoombak ZMBK200 Advanced GPS Car and Family LocatorZoombak ZMBK200 Advanced GPS Car and Family Locator
USD $119.89
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GPS Tracking Tracker
electronics Instant  gps locator Info And Tips

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Added: February 3, 2010



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car gps Significant Info

Posted by gps_units on January 25, 2010

This Magellan GPS is not a bad GPS. Indeed, for someone who has never used a GPS before, this might be a pleasant experience. But for the past two or three years, I have used a Garmin GPS. And compared to the Garmin, the Magellan is an exercise in frustration.

Let’s just start from the beginning.

Satellite connection:

This thing took an inordinate amount of time to connect to the satellite signals when I first started it up. I don’t know if this is because it was searching the entire world for the correct satellites, or what, but all the Garmin GPS devices I have used ask you to input your initial position manually, probably so that it doesn’t have to go searching the entire sky to figure out which satellites to use and where you are. It took so long to connect, in fact, that I thought I had received a faulty unit.

On subsequent startups, the connection was much quicker, but still not as fast as my two-year-old Garmin.

Entering addresses:

Typing in your destination address is a bad experience. Why? Well, as you type each letter, the Magellan tries to figure out which street you are talking about. This is fine, but as soon as it figures out — or thinks it figures out — what street you probably mean, it jumps to a screen of street name suggestions. This would be fine if it paused briefly before accepting new input. But it doesn’t, and so fast typists like me will inevitably choose a street or city without seeing what we have selected, because we are still typing the name. Then you have to go back and start again.

In comparison, the Garmin throws in a slight one second delay before allowing you to choose the intended street name from its list of suggestions. This prevents any accidental input.

Navigation:

Okay, this is a big one. The Magellan’s navigation algorithms are, for want of a better word, funky. I had the machine set to give me the fastest, rather than the shortest, route. However, its alleged fastest route is almost never the actual fastest route. This is a huge problem, essentially negating one of the main benefits of a GPS. I know how to get to a lot of places around town in a roundabout way, but presumably a GPS is able to calculate the most direct route. However, as I entered in destinations into the Magellan, I was shocked and annoyed to find that its fastest route was always several minutes longer than the Garmin’s fastest route. (For comparison’s sake, I was often using the Magellan and the Garmin at the same time.)

The Garmin always knew what it was doing. When I entered in an address across town, the Garmin usually told me to take the freeway (specifically, I 66), and would give me its estimated time of arrival. The Magellan, however, wanted me to take an odd, non-freeway route, with an estimated time of arrival of several minutes longer than the Garmin’s calculation. I double-checked the Magellan’s settings to make sure that freeways were enabled, and indeed they were. For some reason, the Magellan simply wasn’t using them. When I decided to take the Garmin’s advice, the Magellan eventually recalculated the route, and now that it was on the freeway, it gave me an updated time of arrival — several minutes shorter than its original so-called fastest time.

The Magellan’s fastest time calculations are simply wrong. I know this not just from my experimental observations, but also because it has a neat feature where you can see a screen listing the estimated time of arrival using its various different navigation settings: fastest time, shortest route, etc. Frequently, it’s “fastest time” was actually longer than the rest of the navigation options. This makes absolutely no sense and is indicative of a bug in the navigation algorithms.

Voice guidance:

Had I never used a Garmin GPS, I would have thought the Magellan’s voice guidance was perfectly adequate. However, with the Magellan and the Garmin sitting next to each other, both trying to explain what to do next, the differences — and the shortcomings of the Magellan — were obvious. The Magellan’s computerized voice was stilted, and nowhere as natural sounding as the Garmin. The Magellan would say something like, “Right Turn, Point Five Miles, Harrison Street.” The Garmin would say, “In Point Five Miles, Turn Right on Harrison Street.”

Voice guidance on freeways was even worse, a crying shame considering the high speeds at which one drives on the freeway. You should not have to use any brainpower to decipher what the GPS is trying to tell you, and yet the Magellan required some concentration and decoding. It would bombard you with various route and exit numbers, giving you far more information than you need to take the next exit, and rattling off that information without natural pauses. It was frustrating.

Freeway navigation theoretically should have been made more pleasing than the Garmin by the addition of Magellan’s interesting sounding Exit Sign Technology. This feature allows you to display the various green freeway signs on the screen of your Magellan, highlighting the sign that you want to follow. This is supposed to be easier than just listening to the voice telling you which exit to take. But it really just adds confusion, as I have to stare at the different reproduced signs, (which are not actual pictures of the real highway signs, by the way, but just generic green highway signs that usually look nothing like the real signs), and try to figure out what it wants me to do. Again, this just requires more brainpower and makes it more likely that I will get confused at 80 mph and miss an exit.

And the Magellan’s timing was off. Timing on a GPS is a very subtle, yet important feature. The GPS has to be able to tell you when to turn at different times depending on what speed you are going, how far ahead the turn is, whether you’re going to need to switch lanes quickly to make the turn, etc. Garmin’s programmers got this right; Magellan’s didn’t. Again, this is something that I might not even have realized had I only been using the Magellan, and had I never used a Garmin. But, having had a successful GPS experience for years, the deficiencies in the Magellan’s voice and timing algorithms were evident.

Display:

The navigation display colors are horrible. I don’t know if the Magellan engineers had never used any other GPS devices, or did not focus group their display, but the colors they chose to delineate roads and routes are completely nonsensical. During the day, in order to indicate the routes to take, the Garmin highlights your suggested roads in a light yellowish green line, which is displayed over a slightly darker yellowish green background. At night, the color scheme is not much better. Now, my eyes are fine. I am in my late 20s and I can generally see things on a LCD monitor with no problem, and yet I had trouble seeing which roads were actually highlighted.

The Garmin gets this right. It overlays a bright pink line against a gray background during the day, and a dark blue background at night. This is much easier to see. There are never any questions over whether or not a road is actually highlighted. I always know where I’m supposed to go.

It is really ironic that the Magellan, which has an amazingly clear and bright LCD screen, would be so inferior in this area to my old clunky Garmin with its faded screen. But because of the questionable choice of colors, the Garmin crushes it.

Does the Magellan have any pros?

Sure. As I said, it has a beautiful screen. It is generally a fast machine (except for connecting to the satellite, sometimes). Its navigation interface, although cluttered, gives you quicker one touch access to destinations than the Garmin does. This is handy when on the highway, for instance — it takes two taps to see the list of nearest gas stations (Where to, Gas), compared to four taps on the Garmin (Menu, Where to, Food/Fuel/Etc., Gas Stations). The Garmin is less cluttered, but it takes longer to wade through its many submenus. Finally, the Magellan’s standard closing phrase (”You have ARRIVED!”) sounds far cooler than the Garmin’s ho-hum “Now arriving.”

Bottom line:

My two-year-old Garmin GPS is a far superior device to this brand-new Magellan. Had I never known the Garmin, I would be satisfied with the Magellan. But I know what a GPS device is capable of. I simply cannot use the Magellan because it is incredibly frustrating and gets a lot of things, most notably navigation calculations, very wrong.

My advice? Look at Amazon’s list of best selling GPS devices. The crowd is rarely wrong, and in this case the crowd and I both agree: If you want to get somewhere, Garmin is the way to go.

7 0--hd-gps-bluetooth-rear-view-fm-4gb-free-update-map 7.0" HD GPS Bluetooth Rear view FM 4GB free update MAP
US $28.01 (4 Bids)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:01:55 PST
bracketron-ufm-200-bl-dash-mate-portable-dash-mount Bracketron (UFM-200-BL) Dash-Mate Portable Dash Mount
US $14.98 (0 Bid)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:02:34 PST
garmin-nuvi-1390t-car-gps-2010-us+can~bluetooth+traffic GARMIN NUVI 1390t CAR GPS 2010 US+CAN~BLUETOOTH+TRAFFIC
US $178.55 (11 Bids)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:03:56 PST
as-is-pioneer-avic-f900bt-in-dash-cd dvd-player gps AS-IS Pioneer AVIC-F900BT In-Dash CD/DVD Player/GPS
US $99.00 (12 Bids)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:04:06 PST

TomTom ONE 140-S 3.5-Inch Portable GPS NavigatorTomTom ONE 140-S 3.5-Inch Portable GPS Navigator
Too low to display
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electronics car gps Significant Info

Ebays top picks gps navigation unit

Posted by gps_units on October 23, 2009

Before I show you the GPS Prices From Ebay (which are below) here’s a Tip - Know what you want and need before buying and know that you are are buying the right GPS.

The last GPS I purchased has problems with search. It takes a very long time to find a place 200 miles away from my location.

For example, if you type “tire”, it will find tire store 200 miles from my home.

The one I bought two years ago can do all the search but that GPS had some problems with the touch screen.

So now I need to put two GPS units in the same car. Don’t make this mistake. Pay a little more and buy what you need.

GPS Navigation Units:

garmin-nuvi-1390t-car-gps-2010-us+can~bluetooth+traffic GARMIN NUVI 1390t CAR GPS 2010 US+CAN~BLUETOOTH+TRAFFIC
US $178.55 (11 Bids)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:03:56 PST
as-is-pioneer-avic-f900bt-in-dash-cd dvd-player gps AS-IS Pioneer AVIC-F900BT In-Dash CD/DVD Player/GPS
US $99.00 (12 Bids)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:04:06 PST
garmin-nuvi-765t-car-gps-navigation-2010-maps GARMIN NUVI 765T CAR GPS NAVIGATION 2010 MAPS
US $172.50 (13 Bids)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:09:07 PST
gps-receiver-location-finder-data-logger-photo-tagger GPS Receiver Location Finder Data Logger Photo Tagger
US $89.99
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:09:19 PST


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electronics Ebays top picks gps navigation unit

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electronics Ebays top picks gps navigation unit

Learn More About car gps unit

Posted by gps_units on October 8, 2009

The product was great only flaw that I found was it didnt have the 2amp fuse like the original and in my opinion can be great to stop an electrical surge from reaching your tom tom…but all in all it does the job!

bracketron-ufm-200-bl-dash-mate-portable-dash-mount Bracketron (UFM-200-BL) Dash-Mate Portable Dash Mount
US $14.98 (0 Bid)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:02:34 PST
garmin-nuvi-1390t-car-gps-2010-us+can~bluetooth+traffic GARMIN NUVI 1390t CAR GPS 2010 US+CAN~BLUETOOTH+TRAFFIC
US $178.55 (11 Bids)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:03:56 PST
as-is-pioneer-avic-f900bt-in-dash-cd dvd-player gps AS-IS Pioneer AVIC-F900BT In-Dash CD/DVD Player/GPS
US $99.00 (12 Bids)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:04:06 PST
tom-tom-one-limited-edition-portable-gps-4n00 004 Tom Tom One Limited Edition Portable GPS 4n00.004
US $36.25 (1 Bid)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:05:05 PST

Magellan Premium Car Kit for iPhone and iPod touchMagellan Premium Car Kit for iPhone and iPod touch
USD $129.99
Order Now

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electronics Learn More About  car gps unit

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electronics Learn More About  car gps unit

Looking For TomTom Information?

Posted by gps_units on August 29, 2009

Review:
This was my first car-type GPS and I’ve used it for both long distance and local directions. It has been exceptionally helpful in driving thru large cities on the free-ways by anticipating what lane you need to be in … particularly helpful when pulling a trailer. But it has some weakness in cities as it will tell you to exit one street too soon where streets are close together.

Its major weakness is that it can give you seriously wrong routing choices. For example, it got me “lost” in Washington DC going in both directions, north and south on I-95, lost in the sense that I ended up on city streets when all I wanted to do was by-pass the city. Routing in remote rural areas is worthless … maybe even dangerously wrong …. adding 100 miles to a 160 mile trip, for example. Routing between Kansas City and Lincoln, NE …. it chose to go up thru Omaha when there is a VASTLY better route.

I’ve found it best, on long distance trips, to use Mapquest and then manually enter segments of the trip onto the TomTom using their “navigate to” option. Even then, I sometimes have to refer to my printed Mapquest directions rather than follow the TomTom.

7--car-dvd-player-+-gps-navigation-+-bluetooth-+-ipod 7" CAR DVD PLAYER + GPS NAVIGATION + BLUETOOTH + IPOD
US $199.99 (0 Bid)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:10:09 PST
tomtom-rider-2nd-edition-motorcycle-gps-navigation TOMTOM RIDER 2ND EDITION MotorCycle GPS Navigation
US $316.00 (28 Bids)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:11:33 PST
tomtom-one-xl-4 3in-portable-gps-navigation-unit TomTom ONE XL 4.3in Portable GPS Navigation Unit
US $56.00 (20 Bids)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:13:16 PST
tomtom-go-930-car-gps-tom-navigation-system-us -can eur TomTom GO 930 Car GPS TOM NAVIGATION SYSTEM US/ CAN/EUR
US $229.95
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 9:15:04 PST


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Articles On Garmin Ique 3600 And Such

Posted by gps_units on August 22, 2009

This little gadget works even better than expected. It stays nicely on the dashboard even when taking sharp turns. Easy to hook up and move from 1 vehicle to the next.

garmin-nuvi-300-310-350-360-650-660-670-car-gps-antenna GARMIN NUVI 300 310 350 360 650 660 670 CAR GPS ANTENNA
US $10.49 (0 Bid)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 10:27:38 PST
-low-profile-remote-antenna--works-with-garmin-gps LOW PROFILE REMOTE ANTENNA works with GARMIN GPS
US $16.95 (0 Bid)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 15:54:14 PST
garmin-ique-3600-pda gps-system-for-parts-or-repair!! Garmin iQue 3600 PDA/GPS System for PARTS OR REPAIR!!
US $39.95 (0 Bid)
End Date: Thursday Mar-11-2010 19:00:40 PST
-low-profile-remote-antenna--works-with-garmin-gps LOW PROFILE REMOTE ANTENNA works with GARMIN GPS
US $14.95 (0 Bid)
End Date: Friday Mar-12-2010 9:09:12 PST

Garmin Suction Cup Mount including speaker w/12V cable (iQue 3600 not included)Garmin Suction Cup Mount including speaker w/12V cable (iQue 3600 not included)
USD $44.64
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iQue 3600 -

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electronics Articles On  Garmin Ique 3600 And Such