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Using Cell Phone As Your GPS

d1h
Nomad III
Nomad III
Do a lot of you use your cell phone as a GPS? I know that using the GPS on your phone runs your battery down faster so generally you need to have it plugged into power at all times. Just wondering if this is hard on your cell phone battery since your battery is constantly charging and screen is lit up at all times. Second question for those of you that have iPhones. Do you prefer Apple maps or google maps.
50 REPLIES 50

drsteve
Explorer
Explorer
We used Google as our GPS to navigate Lake Cumberland KY on a week-long houseboat trip last summer. Worked flawlessly.
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1991 Palomino Filly PUP

carmichael
Explorer
Explorer
With co-pilot do you need to be on a data plan or are all maps preloaded? Can it be used on a chromebook while offline?

bighatnohorse
Explorer II
Explorer II
Cell phone GPS works - and it works internationally using Google.
I drove from Panama City, Panama to Boquete using Google with a local SIM card installed.
(Boquete is in the mountain jungles) It worked flawlessly.

I prefer the larger screen size of my Garmin, though.
And we use the Google GPS cell phone as a backup feature when there are traffic jams so as to get real-time routing.
I've seen Uber drivers use their cell phones as GPS and they leave the phone plugged in all the time.
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wiskeyVI
Explorer
Explorer
That could be. I tried it once on a 10" windows laptop and it was fantastic...

lryrob9301
Explorer
Explorer
wiskeyVI wrote:
lryrob9301 wrote:
I no longer use a GPS but use the Co-Pilot app on my android tablet that has a GPS sensor built in. With Co-Pilot you can configure your vehicle size and it will keep you out of trouble.


I thought CoPilot went away some time ago?


Nope, mine just did a minor update yesterday. I believe your thinking of Rand McNally.

wiskeyVI
Explorer
Explorer
lryrob9301 wrote:
I no longer use a GPS but use the Co-Pilot app on my android tablet that has a GPS sensor built in. With Co-Pilot you can configure your vehicle size and it will keep you out of trouble.


I thought CoPilot went away some time ago?

zigzagrv
Explorer
Explorer
lryrob9301 wrote:
I no longer use a GPS but use the Co-Pilot app on my android tablet that has a GPS sensor built in. With Co-Pilot you can configure your vehicle size and it will keep you out of trouble.


THIS ^^^

Ron



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parker_rowe
Explorer
Explorer
Actually, the GPS (in my iPhone at least) continues to work fine even if you don't have cell service or data.

I've just started using Waze, but Google Maps can download the route so it can continue to guide you even after cell service drops. If you try to re-route in a no service area though, good luck!

I've never owned a standalone GPS, although our Caravan does have a built in one. It is nice other than being slightly out of date and a PITA to update the maps.
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lryrob9301
Explorer
Explorer
I no longer use a GPS but use the Co-Pilot app on my android tablet that has a GPS sensor built in. With Co-Pilot you can configure your vehicle size and it will keep you out of trouble.

Lantley
Nomad
Nomad
Mickeyfan0805 wrote:
drsteve wrote:

Last summer DW and I were camping in a state park on Lake Michigan, and we decided to go explore the adjacent National Forest. We went looking for a NPS campground, and the Google Lady had us leave the paved road and go down a dirt road... that got narrower and narrower... then became a two track... then became a sandy ORV trail. I was lucky to find a place to turn around.

Had we stayed on the paved road the campground was only a couple miles away...


This is why, anymore, I actually pre-review maps and plan routes for any travels outside of my areas of familiarity. We were once routed onto the side-streets of Boston, spending 30 minutes going from street light to street light, in order to cut a few miles off the highway route. I know most systems can be configured to try to avoid this stuff, but I don't trust it when I'm towing. I pre-determine any route I'm taking long distance and then use the GPS/phone nave systems locally from destination to destination.

Ultimately this is why I prefer the Built in GPS when towing. In general its routing is not quite as aggressive as using my Apps.
Again no GPS is foolproof, but the Garmin keeps me on the larger main roads and is less likely to short cut me through a neighborhood or down a dirt road.
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2oldman
Explorer II
Explorer II
Mickeyfan0805 wrote:
d, I wouldn't ever start an argument with 'easy to find on Google.' There's a lot that's easy to find on Google, and most of it is profoundly false!
Hmmm.. maybe I should google "google is mostly wrong".
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AsheGuy
Explorer
Explorer
GordonThree wrote:
Easy to find on Google. Micro-cycling is one side affect, and other is driving "whiskers" deeper into the electrode structures, making them less likely to dissolve in future recharge cycles.

LI batteries are continually evolving as are the electronics that manage them. So it is good to check the date of articles that attempt to describe how to manage your LI battery. Here are a couple of recent articles that seem to discount your claim:

How to prolong lithium based batteries

How to Calibrate a โ€œSmartโ€ Battery

Smart LI batteries and smart devices do not require the same discharging cycles that older batteries do.
David & Margaret - 2005 LTV 210B 3S
- Our Blog -

GordonThree
Explorer
Explorer
I'm not looking to argue either, but also not do another's leg work. Just saying there's plenty of scholarly articles available on the subject.
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Mickeyfan0805
Explorer
Explorer
GordonThree wrote:

Easy to find on Google.


I'm not going to get into the argument, as it is a place I've only ever 'heard' that certain things were true and untrue. That said, I wouldn't ever start an argument with 'easy to find on Google.' There's a lot that's easy to find on Google, and most of it is profoundly false!

Mickeyfan0805
Explorer
Explorer
drsteve wrote:

Last summer DW and I were camping in a state park on Lake Michigan, and we decided to go explore the adjacent National Forest. We went looking for a NPS campground, and the Google Lady had us leave the paved road and go down a dirt road... that got narrower and narrower... then became a two track... then became a sandy ORV trail. I was lucky to find a place to turn around.

Had we stayed on the paved road the campground was only a couple miles away...


This is why, anymore, I actually pre-review maps and plan routes for any travels outside of my areas of familiarity. We were once routed onto the side-streets of Boston, spending 30 minutes going from street light to street light, in order to cut a few miles off the highway route. I know most systems can be configured to try to avoid this stuff, but I don't trust it when I'm towing. I pre-determine any route I'm taking long distance and then use the GPS/phone nave systems locally from destination to destination.