Nov-22-2020 03:21 PM
Nov-26-2020 05:19 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
You will be hard pressed to find a tablet for sale that doesn't include GPS.
All mapping systems need to be plugged in unless you are driving only very short distances.
How is it risky? Your worst case is to pull over and ask for directions...but really, you can always pull out your phone and check on google maps.
Tablets are cheap, if you are worried about using it for something else taking the map off line...just leave one in the car as a dedicated GPS system.
Even zoomed in, a scan of a paper map will never be as accurate or as up to date as an online mapping system. I've yet to see a paper map that indicates the lane I'm best choosing when entering a complicated interchange.
Cheap tablets=junk. Pretty much ANYTHING under $180 in a Tablet is garbage, been there, done that.
Not EVERY tablet has GPS radios built in, period.
HAVE run into that, DW and DD have burned through many more tablets than I have with real PCs and a few of their tablets most certainly did not have GPS radios.
Tablets go out of date, run out of manufacturer support pretty quickly. Android OS is nothing more than one huge "experiment" and is pretty bug laden. Tablet processors are weak "ARM" processors and Android has considerable amount of limitations.
Then you go to all of these "App" developers, you toss the dice and take your chances with these Apps, they are often very buggy, have very limited QA.. Some work, some do not, some bring a lot of "ads" and other unwanted junk.
And you are going to bet your life on GPS on a Tablet?
Our several attempts with CoPilot on several different Tablets, we could not get it to recognize our rural area properly, seems our home moves and where a grocery store is, a farmers field, a church, a defunct railroad tunnel that has been closed for 30 yrs and all locations 2 miles or more away from our home.. Sometimes driving along on roads CoPilot would show us as driving a mile off the road..
No consistency to what it detected as our starting point or if it could locate us properly.
And you want to bet your life on GPS on a Tablet?
CoPilot would also lose it's mind when going in a tunnel, often taking minutes to reacquire sat signals on the other end..
A scan of a paper map HOLDs it's "accuracy" and is always there even when you have no cell signal or Wifi.
Roads do not randomly change, appear, disappear over night so even a paper map from 10 yrs ago is still valid. Takes considerable amount of yrs of planning or building by DOT to change or add roads so paper maps tend to be a valid tool for many yrs.
GPS maps must be continually updated since they started out with extremely old base maps (they didn't build the maps from scratch, they BOUGHT OLD MAPS, converted them into an electronic form)and over time they add in additional details as the map makers play catch up.
There are also plenty of vast areas where GPS map info is non existent or totally incorrect which sends folks driving into farmers fields, into ponds, lakes or even old farmers roads into the middle of no where..
Not unusual for GPS to toss you onto very small roads with bridges or obstructions too low for a RV.. Have a bridge not far from my home that truckers using GPS seem to be attracted to, has been damaged multiple times.. I take one look at the size of the road and shake my head, no way I would take anything bigger than a automobile on that road..
As far as figuring out lane choices, that IS what the ROAD SIGNS ARE FOR! The DOT of every state has the responsibility to ensure the road signs are placed in an orderly fashion which will give you enough time at the POSTED SPEED LIMITS to notice, read and take proper action. I can't help if you or anyone else are not able to determine what lane to be in, I have not had that issue and have always gotten to my destination in fine fashion.
GPS is not an excuse to toss paper maps and ignore road signs, it is nothing more than a extra tool in your trip to use alongside other methods.
We PLAN our routes ahead of time, we use our paper maps and now days plenty of good online methods along with our paper maps.
MAPQUEST gives you blow by blow directions and a map to follow.. Put in beginning point and destination and it will give you detailed directions to follow. You can then PRINT the directions and map.
You can also snip the directions and map and save it as a JPG and put on your tablet or phone.
Don't like Mapquest?
Then try GOOGLEMAPS
If I was ever going to consider GPS, it WOULD be a "dedicated" standalone GPS and not a Tablet with buggy OS and buggy software with buggy maps. You get what you pay for and there IS a reason standalone GPS units are more expensive.
Nov-25-2020 01:24 PM
Gdetrailer wrote:
Cheap tablets=junk. Pretty much ANYTHING under $180 in a Tablet is garbage, been there, done that.
Not EVERY tablet has GPS radios built in, period.
And you are going to bet your life on GPS on a Tablet?
Roads do not randomly change, appear, disappear over night so even a paper map from 10 yrs ago is still valid. Takes considerable amount of yrs of planning or building by DOT to change or add roads so paper maps tend to be a valid tool for many yrs.
There are also plenty of vast areas where GPS map info is non existent or totally incorrect which sends folks driving into farmers fields, into ponds, lakes or even old farmers roads into the middle of no where..
As far as figuring out lane choices, that IS what the ROAD SIGNS ARE FOR! The DOT of every state has the responsibility to ensure the road signs are placed in an orderly fashion which will give you enough time at the POSTED SPEED LIMITS to notice, read and take proper action. I can't help if you or anyone else are not able to determine what lane to be in, I have not had that issue and have always gotten to my destination in fine fashion.
GPS is not an excuse to toss paper maps and ignore road signs, it is nothing more than a extra tool in your trip to use alongside other methods.
We PLAN our routes ahead of time, we use our paper maps and now days plenty of good online methods along with our paper maps.
Nov-25-2020 09:30 AM
Nov-25-2020 09:01 AM
valhalla360 wrote:
You will be hard pressed to find a tablet for sale that doesn't include GPS.
All mapping systems need to be plugged in unless you are driving only very short distances.
How is it risky? Your worst case is to pull over and ask for directions...but really, you can always pull out your phone and check on google maps.
Tablets are cheap, if you are worried about using it for something else taking the map off line...just leave one in the car as a dedicated GPS system.
Even zoomed in, a scan of a paper map will never be as accurate or as up to date as an online mapping system. I've yet to see a paper map that indicates the lane I'm best choosing when entering a complicated interchange.
Nov-25-2020 03:33 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:
Not ALL tablets include GPS radios either.
Also noticed that when using CoPilot, the Tablet just ate right through the battery and the second the charger was plugged in, Copilot would freeze and then reboot the Tablet..
Betting your life on a buggy OS like Android and a highly buggy "app" is pretty risky.
If you needed the Tablet for anything else, you had to shut down Copilot, then once done with the other App you had to restart Copilot from the beginning and setup the trip again and again..
GPS is only a "tool", it can and will make mistakes, best to not 100% depend on it and use backup paper and your eyes and mind on the road signs..
A far better idea we found was to scan in our Paper Atlas as JPGs and DW can view the JPGs on her Tablet. Allows her to to zoom in closely like a magnifying glass or zoom out depending on level of detail she wants to look at. We still keep the paper Atlas also..
Nov-24-2020 09:14 AM
lryrob9301 wrote:
An alternative to dedicated GPS units, at half the price, is an android tablet with built in GPS sensor running the CO-PILOT RV app. CO-PILOT does not need cell service since the map software is loaded on the tablet. CO-PILOT can be configured for the size and weight of the RV and has campgrounds, rest areas, and other attractions in it's database. I've been using it for over 7 years and never had a problem with being routed over weight limited roads or low overpasses.
Nov-24-2020 06:50 AM
Nov-23-2020 05:08 PM
Scott M wrote:
Good solar article. As many do now our class c came pre-wired for solar. Aside from a plug on the roof, I’m not sure what else I would need to complete a solar install.
Nov-23-2020 04:46 PM
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Nov-23-2020 02:31 PM
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Nov-23-2020 07:08 AM