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Does anyone know of any reasonable cost GPSs suitable for both street
and aviation use. I'd like to have turn-by-turn directions and be able to look up com frequencies. -Hopeful -Charles Talleyrand |
#2
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In a previous article, Charles Talleyrand said:
Does anyone know of any reasonable cost GPSs suitable for both street and aviation use. I'd like to have turn-by-turn directions and be able to look up com frequencies. There's no such thing as a "reasonable cost" aviation GPS. That said, I'm pretty happy with my 296, both in the air and on the ground. I have the optional car kit that gives you a charger cord with a speaker for spoken turn-by-turn directions, a CD with detail maps, and a bean-bag mount so that I can throw it on the dash of a rental car after I arrive at the destination airport. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ Flying is not dangerous; crashing is dangerous. |
#3
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![]() Paul Tomblin wrote: In a previous article, Charles Talleyrand said: Does anyone know of any reasonable cost GPSs suitable for both street and aviation use. I'd like to have turn-by-turn directions and be able to look up com frequencies. There's no such thing as a "reasonable cost" aviation GPS. That said, I'm pretty happy with my 296, both in the air and on the ground. I have the optional car kit that gives you a charger cord with a speaker for spoken turn-by-turn directions, a CD with detail maps, and a bean-bag mount so that I can throw it on the dash of a rental car after I arrive at the destination airport. I'll second that. I've used two separate programs on my PDA for driving, Mapopolis and Pocket Map Navigator, with Mapopolis being much better. The 296 is every bit as good, I was suprised it was as good as it is being as it's primary function is aviation. The 296 gets the nod as the GPS is built in and an all in one unit is simply more stable than the PDA. I hardly use my PDA anymore. |
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On May 20, 7:54 pm, Newps wrote:
Paul Tomblin wrote: In a previous article, Charles Talleyrand said: Does anyone know of any reasonable cost GPSs suitable for both street and aviation use. I'd like to have turn-by-turn directions and be able to look up com frequencies. There's no such thing as a "reasonable cost" aviation GPS. That said, I'm pretty happy with my 296, both in the air and on the ground. I have the optional car kit that gives you a charger cord with a speaker for spoken turn-by-turn directions, a CD with detail maps, and a bean-bag mount so that I can throw it on the dash of a rental car after I arrive at the destination airport. I'll second that. I've used two separate programs on my PDA for driving, Mapopolis and Pocket Map Navigator, with Mapopolis being much better. The 296 is every bit as good, I was suprised it was as good as it is being as it's primary function is aviation. The 296 gets the nod as the GPS is built in and an all in one unit is simply more stable than the PDA. I hardly use my PDA anymore. I would recommend WingX for the aviation software, and Tomtom for the street software, both running on the pocketpc. |
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On May 20, 6:15 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote:
In a previous article, Charles Talleyrand said: Does anyone know of any reasonable cost GPSs suitable for both street and aviation use. I'd like to have turn-by-turn directions and be able to look up com frequencies. There's no such thing as a "reasonable cost" aviation GPS. That said, I'm pretty happy with my 296, both in the air and on the ground. I have the optional car kit that gives you a charger cord with a speaker for spoken turn-by-turn directions, a CD with detail maps, and a bean-bag mount so that I can throw it on the dash of a rental car after I arrive at the destination airport. It sounds perfect, but the cost is unreasonable. I could afford a street GPS, and aviation GPS, and have money left over for the price of a Garmin 296. Is there maybe a lesser cost option? -Charles |
#6
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![]() Andrew Sarangan wrote: I would recommend WingX for the aviation software, and Tomtom for the street software, both running on the pocketpc. I use Wing X also, but not the latest version, the one before that. The latest is not as good, way too much crap on there. |
#7
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On May 20, 6:15 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote:
In a previous article, Charles Talleyrand said: Does anyone know of any reasonable cost GPSs suitable for both street and aviation use. I'd like to have turn-by-turn directions and be able to look up com frequencies. There's no such thing as a "reasonable cost" aviation GPS. That said, I'm pretty happy with my 296, both in the air and on the ground. I have the optional car kit that gives you a charger cord with a speaker for spoken turn-by-turn directions, a CD with detail maps, and a bean-bag mount so that I can throw it on the dash of a rental car after I arrive at the destination airport. It sounds perfect, but the cost is unreasonable. I could afford a street GPS, and aviation GPS, and have money left over for the price of a Garmin 296. Is there maybe a lesser cost option? -Charles |
#8
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![]() On May 20, 6:15 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote: In a previous article, Charles Talleyrand said: Does anyone know of any reasonable cost GPSs suitable for both street and aviation use. I'd like to have turn-by-turn directions and be able to look up com frequencies. There's no such thing as a "reasonable cost" aviation GPS. That said, I'm pretty happy with my 296, both in the air and on the ground. I have the optional car kit that gives you a charger cord with a speaker for spoken turn-by-turn directions, a CD with detail maps, and a bean-bag mount so that I can throw it on the dash of a rental car after I arrive at the destination airport. It sounds perfect, but the cost is unreasonable. I could afford a street GPS, and aviation GPS, and have money left over for the price of a Garmin 296. Is there maybe a lesser cost option? What is your budget? I have Lowrance AirMap 1000 that works for air and ground, but it does not have Turn by Turn. May have to have the wife and a thomas brothers for that. Mike Alexander PP-ASEL Temecula, CA See my online aerial photo album at http://flying.4alexanders.com |
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On May 20, 10:56 pm, Mike 'Flyin'8' wrote:
On May 20, 6:15 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote: In a previous article, Charles Talleyrand said: Does anyone know of any reasonable cost GPSs suitable for both street and aviation use. I'd like to have turn-by-turn directions and be able to look up com frequencies. There's no such thing as a "reasonable cost" aviation GPS. That said, I'm pretty happy with my 296, both in the air and on the ground. I have the optional car kit that gives you a charger cord with a speaker for spoken turn-by-turn directions, a CD with detail maps, and a bean-bag mount so that I can throw it on the dash of a rental car after I arrive at the destination airport. It sounds perfect, but the cost is unreasonable. I could afford a street GPS, and aviation GPS, and have money left over for the price of a Garmin 296. Is there maybe a lesser cost option? What is your budget? I have Lowrance AirMap 1000 that works for air and ground, but it does not have Turn by Turn. May have to have the wife and a thomas brothers for that. My budget. My wife has not told me yet :-) Basically, I think I have three options. A Garmin GPSMAP 96 with the MapSource CD-ROM. It runs 375+99= $474. This is not the color unit and only has 13M available for street data. I have no idea if this is enough. And the screen is small. But it's a Garmin, which means the interface is liked by me. A reconditioned Garmin GPS Pilot III for about $300, and any street gps for another $300. Total $600. The screens will be larger. A Lowrance AirMap 600c GPS. Total cost $500. Seems to do everything, has a nice color screen and large memory, and has fine reviews, but I've never used a Lowrance so it lacks to me name brand appeal. Any advice? -Charles Talleyrand |
#10
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![]() My budget. My wife has not told me yet :-) Basically, I think I have three options. A Garmin GPSMAP 96 with the MapSource CD-ROM. It runs 375+99= $474. This is not the color unit and only has 13M available for street data. I have no idea if this is enough. And the screen is small. But it's a Garmin, which means the interface is liked by me. A reconditioned Garmin GPS Pilot III for about $300, and any street gps for another $300. Total $600. The screens will be larger. A Lowrance AirMap 600c GPS. Total cost $500. Seems to do everything, has a nice color screen and large memory, and has fine reviews, but I've never used a Lowrance so it lacks to me name brand appeal. Any advice? -Charles Talleyrand I know nothing about the turn by turn, never used one, but I am happy with my Lowrance Air Map 1000. However, it does not meet your turn by turn requirements, so I am in no position to recommend anything. Mike Alexander PP-ASEL Temecula, CA See my online aerial photo album at http://flying.4alexanders.com |
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