Renato1
Established Member
- Joined
- May 1, 2015
- Posts
- 1,730
Hi,
I'm off to the USA soon, and noticed that Hertz charge over A$300 to have their navigator unit as an extra in their cars. I can't rely on my smart phone and an app (its GPS isn't good enough), so want to buy a GPS unit locally, purchase the maps and take it to the USA. Then later to purchase Europe maps, and take that navigator over to Europe next year.
If anyone has done this for the USA, could you please tell me which make and unit that you bought, and how happy you were with its performance.
I ask because my original Aldi/ Route 66 navigator that I used in Italy was often telling me to turn into non-existent roads in the middle of fields, and giving me the most ridiculous routes along tiny narrow roads to save a couple of meters compared to going via main roads. And my next unit, a Navigon, worked okay route wise, but always had a tough time quickly connecting to satellites - I'd have to drive off in some direction for five or 10 minutes before it told me which way to go. Annoyingly, that Navigon unit (part of the Garmin group) can no longer be updated even though it has plenty of spare memory - deliberately made obselete.
Thanks for any suggestions that you can give me.
Regards,
Renato
I'm off to the USA soon, and noticed that Hertz charge over A$300 to have their navigator unit as an extra in their cars. I can't rely on my smart phone and an app (its GPS isn't good enough), so want to buy a GPS unit locally, purchase the maps and take it to the USA. Then later to purchase Europe maps, and take that navigator over to Europe next year.
If anyone has done this for the USA, could you please tell me which make and unit that you bought, and how happy you were with its performance.
I ask because my original Aldi/ Route 66 navigator that I used in Italy was often telling me to turn into non-existent roads in the middle of fields, and giving me the most ridiculous routes along tiny narrow roads to save a couple of meters compared to going via main roads. And my next unit, a Navigon, worked okay route wise, but always had a tough time quickly connecting to satellites - I'd have to drive off in some direction for five or 10 minutes before it told me which way to go. Annoyingly, that Navigon unit (part of the Garmin group) can no longer be updated even though it has plenty of spare memory - deliberately made obselete.
Thanks for any suggestions that you can give me.
Regards,
Renato