One thing I looking for is a good old fashioned Compass . Cloudy days make it hard to know which way you're going.
That's one of the things I like about my cheap Chinese GPS.One thing I looking for is a good old fashioned Compass . Cloudy days make it hard to know which way you're going.
As an old pilot I know that You are never lost, only temporarily confused!This is an interesting subject.
Some years ago I wrote a maps app for blackberry, it was quite popular. I have also studied and done orienteering. Currently I use a dedicated iPhone and a couple of Garmins. Also the Sun and the compass app on my phone which works without a phone signal or a satellite signal. It’s surprising how often I use just the time and sun, which does not work on a cloudy day or at night.
I’m annoyed by the fact that Apple maps includes an editors picks panel in the app which shows me irrelevant information and cannot be turned off. I want to see a map and directions, not black history month or any other information which is not directly tied to my navigation needs.
I have been lost a few times on back roads in the middle of nowhere on overcast days and the only thing that worked was the compass. Which is why I purchased a Garmin inReach+ GPS Satellite Messenger. It has maps, tracking and coms functions. So far so good.
Paper maps are good until you take a wrong turn and don’t know where you are on the map. Then it’s compass time. I have been looking at one of these. Rather than using the iPhone.
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As an old pilot I know that You are never lost, only temporarily confused!
Prefer to fly at a better Skill level than just being able to walk away, rather be able to fly away.Take off's are optional, but landings are not. All is good if you can walk away!
Well, to each their own, as you can see in all the replies here.Wut...?!
I'd agree that they might not have a place in the map-pouch on top of a tank-bag anymore, but I still prefer them as "globe" while planning/editing route segments on PC/Netbook (Garmin MapSource hence offline), and IMHO the 1:400,000 Michelin maps give the best tectonic & road-layout information; we do prefer twisty mountain roads in nice scenery.
I refuse the automatism provided when building routes, I set the start <> stop of the daily stages, and drag/shape/force the bearing line onto those roads *I* want to go on, then check all en-detail in over-zoom to eliminate any still persisting errors (like crossing through a populated area whilst there would be a bypass, etc...)
Then I give each stage a easy recognizable sequential ID, either the date they're to be driven or commencing numbers like 01, 02, 03,... no guesswork when opening them on the GPS...
See to have only 4~5 routes stored on the GPS; the more are stored, the longer it takes the devices to open one... (my old Quest-I simply starts navigation with no delay, whilst the Zumo 200 on my GF's bike already goes through a mystic [importing] process... "modern" kits like XT's are prone to take up to 10 minutes for such when having large numbers of routes stored... seems to confuse them...)
Redundancy; I've a stereo, an iPod, a GPS, an intercom, a phone and paper maps aboard... if one fails, the rest is unaffected (never happened though...)
Folks who run all on one device, like a dumbphone or a "modern" GPS, face a problem when that thingy keels up...
Plus that the last generation GPS seem to struggle when they have to run several operations aside navigation... the dedicated forums are full of complaints about seizing MP3 players, drop out audio, loss of BT connection, seizing navigation, jerky map scrolling, delay in nav instructions, complete crashes... (and why folks have the irresisteble urge to receive phone calls and read messages while riding is beyond me anyway...)
The process of planing and navigation in Europe differs though, we don't have a simple "grid" as layout; roads here often follow historical grown hunting and migration paths of the early man, winding and woven like cob-webs...
Nice for motorcycle touring of course, but putting a strain on the skimmed-down "quickest-route-sales-men-address-finder" alogarithms of today's satnavs... hence my refusal on automatisms...
That's a good question... havent looked but wonder whats available thats good on a bike.One thing I looking for is a good old fashioned Compass . Cloudy days make it hard to know which way you're going.