Forum Discussion

jeffcarp's avatar
jeffcarp
Explorer
Apr 01, 2017

New RV navigation app

There's a new RV-specific navigation app available called SmartRVRoute 2. This is actually the second generation of the previous app. The developer of the app is Teletype which is a pretty well-known name in semi truck navigation. They have a very similar app for trucks as well.

It's available for Android and iPhone. The Android link is: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.teletype.smartrvroute4 but I'm not if the new version is available for iPhone yet. The Android version runs on both smartphones and tablets.

The app is built over the top of Google Maps and it is an online solution so you must have a data connection. The obvious advantage of building over Google Maps is that the map is very up-to-date. Basically, when Google Maps adds a road it will be added in this app.

The route is calculated on the developer's servers because the developer builds RV specific route restrictions as an added layer on Google Maps. You enter the specifics of your RV dimensions and weight and the server understands relevant road restrictions and builds a route around them.

The app also helps with propane restricted tunnels but they do this by using the DOT Hazmat rating system in the RV settings. I don't think the Hazmat ratings really apply to RVs but I think by selecting Hazmat rating 2 it should pretty much achieve the results of avoiding propane restricted tunnels.

A downside to the app is that while it shows Google traffic it does not take Google traffic into account when calculating ETA or selecting the route. It does use historical traffic by time of day to calculate the route though. I've found my test route ETAs to be really accurate. You can manually avoid incidents and you can manually avoid an area but traffic is not avoided automatically.

You can build up to 10 via points or stop over points in a route. Unfortunately there is no way to build this in advance, save it and then activate it at a later time. They claim to be working on that functionality. They do have a web-based route planner that can then send the route to the software but I have not tried that.

The servers also build a layer of RV specific POIs over the top of Google Maps and displays them with large icons on the map. These include a very robust database of truck stops and the icons shown on the map are branded. It includes campgrounds, truck washes, rest areas, etc. You can press on any of these icons on the map and immediately generate a route to that location or add it to your trip as a via point.

The app is an annual $59 subscription fee but they also have one month and 3 year subscription options. Every day at 1 p.m. EST the full functionality of the app is available for free for trial for an hour. Outside of that time window, without a subscription, you can fully explore the app and the settings and the map but you cannot calculate a route.
  • I'm not here to defend the product. I'm not even a customer. I am still deciding what my preferred navigation device is going to be after owning many of the choices over the last 10 years. I've owned (or beta tested) Rand McNally, TomTom, Garmin, Sygic and CoPilot. I'm still searching for a product that meets my list of wants. This app isn't it either.

    I have to disagree that they don't provide any information though. The description of the app is pretty clear that they provide routing specifically based on the RV attributes that you enter. Thats how it's fundamentally different than Google Maps. All of those settings can be explored for free after downloading the app. The app store listing also has a link to their website which has more information, screenshots and a PDF manual download.

    To each their own. The point of this was not to claim product superiority over other products. The point was to simply let people know that there was another option.
  • You get what you give. Look at what these folks have presented. It is not RV friendly in any way, shape or form and even if it was there is almost no way to find out unless I happen to be driving from point A to point B between the hours of 1am-2am or 1pm-2pm. I can't find ANY information as to why this is better than the free Google Maps apps and there is so little information available related to RV routing (not truck routing) that it is impossible to know what the app can or cannot do.
  • Not sure I've ever seen so many smug cynics in one place. This was a simple informational post about a new product. It wasn't even a recommendation. Unreal the attack mode that some people automatically shift to. Sad.
  • OH BOY! I can actually try this product once a day from 1-2PM. That should be plenty of time to make a decision, NOT! Snore!
  • Been a lot or years since I paid $400 for a gps And it didn't use my data or require a full time data connection.
  • I have a smartphone anyway, so using that device either way, the full US Navigon GPS app is $50 and I own it with lifetime updates. There are other RV specific apps many others on here seem to be happy with. These guys seem to think they can charge commercial trucking rates to RV'ers and that's irritating. Also don't forget that app is also a data burner. At 37mb there is nothing resident
  • The app doesn't appear to be very popular on iOS. For some reason there's a lot more reviews for Android. For the prior versions on Android, between the truck and RV product, there's over 500,000 downloads and 4,000 reviews. The new versions haven't been out that long so not many reviews yet.

    Not sure why the subscription price would be a hangup for some people. A new GPS is $400 and if you keep it 5 years that's $80 / year. I'm not a subscriber yet and am not sure if I will be. I'm hung up on the traffic not influencing the route selection and ETA.
  • I still believe in paper maps and common sense. (although I do have a Tom Tom, which is pretty darn stupid sometimes!).
  • It has only a handful of reviews in the App Store, none of them very good at all. At $60/yr just to subscribe (and that is by far the cheapest plan), this thing better stand on its ear, have pages of stellar reviews, and be delivered by Dancin' Girls. It won't last long.

    Pass... Pass... Pass...