Paper Maps Take a Back Seat When RVers Use a GPS
The GPS system is a HUGE blessing to the RVing community! GPS stands for Global Positioning Satellite system developed by the US military and now available to the general public. The US Air Force spent $750,000 to send me to navigator school for a year. I flew KC-135s and would have donated body parts if I could have had the use of a cheap GPS back then. Unfortunately the military was only in the research and development phase of this AWSOME invention. I used Microsoft’s Streets and Trips hooked up to a GPS for a couple of years before acquiring my new Mio Digi-Walker C520 portable GPS system.
This little beauty has a 4.3 inch wide screen and is sleek. It has no external antenna yet is very sensitive and picks up seven or eight satellites even inside your rig with the windows closed. It will save you money on fuel and take you anywhere you want to go in the US and Canada. The reason we ditched Streets and Trips is because I didn’t have room for my laptop computer in our Honda CRV that we tow behind our motorhome.
The Mio can easily be moved from the motorhome to our Honda because it’s attached to the windshield by a suction cup that is secured by a thumb activated latch.
I love using a GPS because if my wife falls asleep (which frequently happens on longer trips) I can find my way to where we’re going without waking her to look something up on the map. I also like these systems because it increases my confidence level about where we are (not lost) and if we ever break down on a lonely stretch of road, I can give the towing company precise GPS coordinates of where we are. If they don’t have a GPS then I can zoom out on my GPS map and give them the nearest cross street. You can purchase this unit on the internet for under $300. How much is it worth to never be lost again? Watch the video below as I take the Mio out for a test drive. Keeping you headed in the right direction - Jim Twamley, Professor of RVing
Labels: GPS



