โJan-24-2015 04:49 AM
โJan-30-2015 07:31 AM
robatthelake wrote:
I ask her because I value the input of others!
Sure I can find My way around every Place on the Planet, there are as You say Maps and Guidebooks. Not to mention Google Earth and Our Faithful GPS!
All that being said none of these resources is as informative as the various opinions expressed by People who have been there recently or who know the various current weather conditions and Routes!
Isn't this the place to exchange useful and informative information?
I thought it was !
โJan-30-2015 06:54 AM
We Cant Wait wrote:
Just curious about all the requests for best routes etc, some even between towns in the same state. Having drove all over Europe while in the military there, and all over the U.S. while driving truck the only references I ever had was, a European Road Atlas, and U.S. Motor Carrier Atlas. Are we as a whole getting to the point that we must have others do more and more things for us by others instead of researching things our self? With all the electronic routing possibilities available to us i.e. Mapsgoole, GPS's, I-Phones, etc it'd seem that planning a route is as easy as a couple of clicks on the key pad.
โJan-30-2015 04:32 AM
โJan-29-2015 07:18 PM
pitch wrote:
I sometimes have wondered the same about some posters. Especially someone asking for directions in his home state.
โJan-29-2015 07:05 PM
โJan-29-2015 06:42 PM
Shot-N-Az wrote:
Asking a question about a particular route or road IS PART OF THE RESEARCH.
โJan-26-2015 08:25 AM
littlemo wrote:I can interrupt a map by spilling coffee on it.Road Runners wrote:Do you have to have "military experience" to interrupt a map? LOL
... maybe our military experience was good for something. We learned how to navigate and read and interrupt maps.
โJan-26-2015 08:04 AM
paulj wrote:Not about to. Just stating the facts as I know them. It is neither shorter or faster. As stated I live in a straight line to the stated road. Just comparing what I know to what it does. Oh, I do not use it to lead me to someplace that I know. I was just experimenting to see how they worked. Happy trails.john&bet wrote:
...I will not follow an electronic maps advise on how to get from my driveway to US-50. It's only 2 miles straight south, but they want me to go south a mile and a half, west 1 mile through a narrow county road with low tree limbs then south one half mile. Oh I was going to go east on US-50 when I got to it. Thanks GPS. Not.
Have you tried to figure out why it is taking that route? It's not just being perverse or (insert a negative human quality of your choice). It's either picking the shortest or fastest route among those that its data base allows. Maybe that last half mile to the highway is nonexistent in its database, or marked as blocked in some way or other. What does it do when you continue straight and it has to recalculate the route? I learn a lot about the GPS database by exploring alternatives.
Same goes for Google maps - look for example at the thread about messed up routing in Yellowstone. One segment in the park is currently 'off-limits' for some reason or other.
โJan-26-2015 07:14 AM
โJan-26-2015 05:02 AM
Road Runners wrote:
Yes I have been wondering about that also. But, maybe our military experience was good for something. We learned how to navigate and read and interrupt maps.
โJan-26-2015 04:57 AM
sdianel wrote:
online mapping only gives 2 options: shortest and fastest. Many of us want scenic but not on bad roads, so we ask people on this forum what route they would take. We like US highways but prefer to hear from people who have traveled them. Steep grades, windy 2 lane roads, bumpy roads, construction and things to see along the way help us make the choice of routes. For example I might know from online mapping that there is construction but first hand experience of driving through it is valuable.
โJan-26-2015 02:18 AM
We Cant Wait wrote:
Just curious about all the requests for best routes etc, some even between towns in the same state. Having drove all over Europe while in the military there, and all over the U.S. while driving truck the only references I ever had was, a European Road Atlas, and U.S. Motor Carrier Atlas. Are we as a whole getting to the point that we must have others do more and more things for us by others instead of researching things our self? With all the electronic routing possibilities available to us i.e. Mapsgoole, GPS's, I-Phones, etc it'd seem that planning a route is as easy as a couple of clicks on the key pad.
โJan-25-2015 06:12 PM
โJan-25-2015 05:40 PM
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โJan-25-2015 02:42 PM