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Thread: GPS question

  1. #1

    GPS question

    Hello,

    I’d like to get a GPS unit for my car, but I have a question. Does the unit have to be mounted in any particular location in the car, in order to receive the signal from the satellite? I was originally under the impression that some part of the unit had to be mounted onto the windshield, but a friend has his sitting in the cup holder between the front seats, and it works fine. Have they made improvements in the units such that they can be mounted almost anywhere?

    Thanks,
    Louis

  2. #2
    With my unit, once it picks up the GPS signals, it can sit anywhere. SOP is to power on the unit, place it on the dashboard for a couple minutes, then enter the address I'm looking for at a stop light and deposit in a cup holder. First thing I did was change the voice to Joanna Lumley's (Patsy from Absolutely Fabulous.)
    Deflation: When I was a kid, an E-ticket meant I was about to go on the ride of my life. Today, an E-ticket means a miserable ride.

  3. #3
    Ok, I understand that it needs to first pick up the satellite signals, but if after it knows where you want to go, you then move it to a place in the vehicle where it can't read the signals, how can it then continue to guide you to your destination?

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Louis Brandt View Post
    Ok, I understand that it needs to first pick up the satellite signals, but if after it knows where you want to go, you then move it to a place in the vehicle where it can't read the signals, how can it then continue to guide you to your destination?
    I don't know if I can absolutely answer your question, but some GPS units have sensors in them which measure three axis acceleration. Once you know your starting location, you can get a reasonable estimate of the direction and distance the car travels, which will allow you to keep your navigation.

    But that's certainly not as accurate as actually receiving the GPS signals.

    Remember, also, that the satellites are usually not directly overhead so you may get an update now and again which allows you to maintain your navigation.

    Wikipedia has a good (and long) discussion of how GPS works.

    Mike
    Go into the world and do well. But more importantly, go into the world and do good.

  5. #5
    I've used mine on my lap on battery power. I've also picked up a signal in a shopping mall in a vehicle on display. It showed the car inside the mall right where it was parked.

    Depends a lot on the unit, the weather and local emt.
    .
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  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Sammamish, WA
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    If i turn mine on in the house, it will never find the satellite. If I take it outside it will find it, but when I bring it back in it loses it. In the car, it will work as long as it's within reach of the windshield, on the console or lap does work, but not in the back seat. I use a heat/AC vent mount so it's on the dash, and it works great there.



    Sammamish, WA

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  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    SE Wisconsin
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    I have a Garmin and it works fine anywhere in the car and in the house. We had problems with ours sticking onto the windshield-fell off a few times as we were driving. We went with a weight dashboard holder. It has a tacky bottom so it won't slip off the dash and we don't have the suction cup marks on the windshield any more. Easy to hide when stopped so the bad guys can't rip it off. I believe that there are several states that it is against the law to have the device suction cupped to the windshield which was another reason to go with the dashboard device.

  8. #8
    Consumer Reports stated in a review that the Garmin suction cup sometimes lost grip and the suction cup mount dropped the GPS. We have Garmin GPS and we experienced the same problem. Like Bob said, we use a weighted mount that just lays on the dashboard and it has never slid off. It looks like a small bean bag with s smooth inner plate for the suction cup to adhear to. Our Garmin suction cup has never detached from that plate.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
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    I have a Garmin nuvi260 that works almost anywhere. It takes a little longer to acquire satellites in the house but it still works. In the car, I install it in its bracket on the console just forward of the shift lever so it's easy to see but out of my line-of-sight. It acquires the satellites very quickly and doesn't lose them unless I go into a parking garage or tunnel.
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] Bill Arnold
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  10. #10
    Join Date
    May 2008
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    Newport News, VA
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    We have a Magellan, and we regularly run with it in the console between the seats.

    Cheers,

    Chris
    If you only took one trip to the hardware store, you didn't do it right.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Colorado
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    My Garmin units allow for an external antenna that I place on the dash. I mount my GPS by the cup holder so I can still see it but don't have to look at it all of the time. IIRC, the antennas are $20-30 extra.

  12. #12
    Join Date
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    Same for me, external antenna in the car, built in antenna on the motorcycle.

    ( I have a Garmin Quest which is waterproof).

    Regards, Rod.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
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    Quote Originally Posted by Rod Sheridan View Post
    Same for me, external antenna in the car, built in antenna on the motorcycle.

    ( I have a Garmin Quest which is waterproof).

    Regards, Rod.
    OK Rod....I'm jealous now. A GPS on your motorcycle.

    My only "on bike" GPS is a willingness to stop at a local store if/when I get lost and can't find my way back. A GPS for my bike is like crazy expensive.

    Maybe I need to start dropping bread crumbs so I can find my way back.
    Thanks & Happy Wood Chips,
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  14. #14
    Quote Originally Posted by Dennis Peacock View Post
    OK Rod....I'm jealous now. A GPS on your motorcycle.
    Buy a Goldwing, it is a built in option.
    Dave J
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  15. #15
    Join Date
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    Newer GPS devices are more forgiving with placement as they are more receptive to "bounced" signals from one or more of the satellites they are tracking while you are using them. You need to have signal from multiple satellites, three minimum and the more, the merrier. That said, you should really mount the unit while in use where you can see it without taking your eyes off the road in general...and that's why you generally see them on the windshield or if factory installed, high up on the center console. Down in the cup-holder doesn't strike me as the best idea from a safety standpoint...
    --

    The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...

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