View Full Version : What gps?
dukebound85
May 18, 2008, 11:15 PM
Which gps system is the best in your opinion?
I would use it mainly for car but it would be nice but not essential if i could mount in motorcycle and maybe take off road when hiking (do any of the car ones incorportate hiking? if not then id want the car one for sure)
any advice would be great
oh, i have a budget of $350 and $200 is a giftcard to bestbuy, so it has to be availiable at bestbuy i guess is what im saying lol
thanks!
brand
May 18, 2008, 11:37 PM
Will you be using it with your Mac?
dukebound85
May 18, 2008, 11:40 PM
Will you be using it with your Mac?
as in downloading updated content/maps? sure it would be nice
however, it wouldnt be the end of the world if i had to resort to windows as i cant imagine updating too often
robanga
May 18, 2008, 11:53 PM
I have three actually. An HP Ipaq that carried TomTom Software, a Magellan Crossover unit with both topo and road maps and a Garmin Colorado with just the topo maps.
As far as a crossover unit the Magellan is good, but they have not provided any updates to the maps in about 1.5 yrs. Crossovers are nice because you get both types of maps. I have not tried using the Magellan with the mac much except maybe to get a firmware upgrade.
The newest Garmin is a nice unit it is their top of the line one and Garmin provides a set of applications that work with Mac OS X. I have not loaded any highway Nav maps for it though.
Overall the TomTom stuff running on the HP unit has provided the best road Nav experience and the Garmin is the best with Topo because of all the applications for Geocaching and the like.
In the past while doing a mixed road and trail vacation, I tend to take the Magellan as it is an all in one.
dukebound85
May 21, 2008, 12:42 AM
im kinda leaning towards the garmin 650. anyone have experience with this model?
Underworld
May 21, 2008, 05:28 AM
I use Nokia 6110 Navigator Mobile
although I hate nokia but i have to admit this mobile is worth it !!
oblomow
May 21, 2008, 05:32 AM
I have a garmin gpsmap 60cx that I use for hiking and navigation in my car.
Happy with it. Works with a Mac as well.
dukebound85
May 24, 2008, 01:21 PM
ok so ive narrowed it down to the 650 and 660
anyone have a prefernece? its only a 50 dollar diff between the two and the 660 has a hard drive, ac adapter, 90 day trial for traffic and weather updates, fm transmitter and bluetooth
other than that they are the same feature wise
txhockey9404
May 24, 2008, 03:09 PM
I have a Garmin Nuvi 680 and it is great. I have had no problems with it at all. I have updated it 3 times with Macs, one running 10.4.11 and one with 10.5.2. I have also added custom vehicles and music, so it does work very well with Macs. The only difference between the 680 and 660 is that the 680 has an MSN Direct adapter in the charger so it can receive traffic information.
This is my first non-car GPS unit so I may not be a really credible source on what is good, but it does work very well with Macs and Garmin has a few Mac applications to go with it.
purdueboiler87
May 25, 2008, 04:45 PM
I have the Garmin 660 and I love it. We had a Magellan when we were in Amsterdam and it didn't tell you to turn until we were in the middle of the instersection. Stick with Garmin.
smogsy
May 25, 2008, 05:35 PM
just to help you out
Tomtom have 90 Satellties
garmin 25
and the other company (forgot the name) has 14
it might help your decision
found it out when buying dads gps :)
RaceTripper
May 25, 2008, 05:50 PM
Tomtom have 90 SatelltiesYeah, but their maps are crap for the US. The number of sats is probably what they use worldwide, not what's available to you at any one location.
I had a TomTom for a couple years and got rid of it early this year after giving up on it being reliable, even though I bought updated maps every year. I had to print paper backup maps anytme I went anywhere becuase of the constant navigation errors.
The Garmin 760 that replaced it is far superior. Directions are very reliable, and the maps have many nearly all the addresses I use that were missing in the TomTom. And it acquires the GPS satellites faster and more reliably -- so much for TomTom's 90 satellites.
Garmin 760 has had great reviews and I saw it was down to $400 on Amazon recently (I paid closer to $500).
robanga
May 25, 2008, 11:45 PM
Having " 90 satellites" is a marketing ploy and a rather funny one at that. The amount of those orbiting friendlies in the sky for viewing by a single receiver is small at any one time.
Even a military aircraft flying at 30,000 feet can only lock on to so many at one time. ( Some are on the other side of the earth ) Even if you have the ability to see more satellites you are still limited by the amount of channels in the device. Most consumers have 12, maybe 16 channels to deal with, the military has 24 so that some of them can be encrypted.
Still, having owned Garmin, TomTom and Magellan...I like them all
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