Easy Rider
New member
I've had a Zumo 660 since 2010. No highways means no paved roads.
No it doesn't. Not on any brand or model.
In the GPS world, it means no Interstates or limited access Freeways.
I've had a Zumo 660 since 2010. No highways means no paved roads.
I agree with everything Peter Aawen and the others said, but I have one comment and that is, "How much have you used the Zumo before?" I ask that not to be snarky but because of my own experience. I installed an aftermarket GPS into one of my cars and programmed it for "home" (just on the other side of the city) and it gave me a ridiculous result -- in which I actually had only to exit the highway and make a left turn, but the GPS told me to exit, turn right, turn left and turn left again, all in the same intersection. It was very irritating but I ignored it since I knew where to go anyway. When I contacted the manufacturer about this weird glitch, they told me it was common when the GPS is brand new and just to keep using it -- sure enough, the next time I went through the intersection, it got it right. These things are never foolproof, anyway.
I agree with everything Peter Aawen and the others said, but I have one comment and that is, "How much have you used the Zumo before?" I ask that not to be snarky but because of my own experience. I installed an aftermarket GPS into one of my cars and programmed it for "home" (just on the other side of the city) and it gave me a ridiculous result -- in which I actually had only to exit the highway and make a left turn, but the GPS told me to exit, turn right, turn left and turn left again, all in the same intersection. It was very irritating but I ignored it since I knew where to go anyway. When I contacted the manufacturer about this weird glitch, they told me it was common when the GPS is brand new and just to keep using it -- sure enough, the next time I went through the intersection, it got it right. These things are never foolproof, anyway.
John, I have NEVER been able to get my gps to give me the right directions in and through Las Vegas. There's just something about the constant road construction there that confuses the hell out of Garmin (and me).:roflblack:
I was using my phone and Google Maps in my F-150 going through Dallas earlier this year and it was doing the same, until i realized that due to the traffic jam we were in, exiting on the off ramp, and re entering on the corresponding on ramp bypassed many other vehicles stuck in the grid lock... we moved ahead 40 or more vehicles every time we followed the Maps instructions. Though at that time I think it would have been better just getting off the interstate and taking surface roads.....:sour:I think some things just will never really get fixed.
Going through downtown Atlanta on 75/85 my Ford still tells me to "keep right".......when that is obviously wrong, since the right lane is EXIT.....about 7 times. I think the map display shows it right though.
exiting on the off ramp, and re entering on the corresponding on ramp bypassed many other vehicles stuck in the grid lock... we moved ahead 40 or more vehicles every time we followed the Maps instructions.
Must admit that your twin bugs had my attention for a moment LoL
TomG
That's nothing compared to what I experience once in awhile. I use Sygic on my Samsung tablet. There's a bug in the program and every once in awhile when I start the app, then leave a parking lot, the lady tells me, "Please follow the route for 1,255,493 miles!" A few hundred feet down the road and all is well then. It must have something to do with picking up two satellite points and dividing some number by zero, or something of the sort.Anyway, on the last night of our trip we were 200 miles from home.
When I selected HOME on the Zumo, it said that my ride was going to be 1300 miles.......YIKES!!!
or as I tell my wife, As the crow flys!
She gets so tired of me saying that :spyder::roflblack:
Yeah, but how techie do you need to be with only two paved roads in the entire state? :yes:I am still so old school that I have never owned or used a GPS device on any of my vehicles. If I need a route, I go to my Rand McNally map book. I am told that Alaska can be interesting with GPS units. They may suggest a road that turns out to be a logging road or a road that now leads to nowhere. Back to the subject at hand...
Huh? :hun:What all these GPS systems need is an "avoid ghetto" option.