Well, its getting closer to the Vancouver and rockies trip, and I promises the 'er indoors that I'd sort a GPS solution for Canada.
On a previous trip we did San Jose to Yosemite with a Hertz hire car, and the o/h wanted a (relatively expensive) satnav with the car. I was ok with this but was hoping to show that the Galaxy S satnavs would be good enough. We hit Modesto, had a slight diversion due to road signs, and the google map route setup at the wifi at the hotel (I have no mobile data in the US, and its probably very expensive roaming, I don't want to take the chance) went haywire, so we were reliant on the Hertz satnav from the 90's...
Unfortunately its detail lacked and the destination of Wawona road for the Wawona hotel was actually an hour and a half long, which it navigated us to the north side (one and a half hour from the destination, google got it right, coming in from the south).
So now, with Canada she's wanting to know that if we are relying on a phone satnav, that its good. I've been told good things about Copilot Premium, had the uk one for 15 quid (full maps download, so no net needed) and it worked fine.
I downloaded the US maps last night, which claimed to include Canada, and did the basic test of Vancouver to Banff. Well, it appears the Canadian maps are really just 20 miles across the border and it seemed to think we'd have to go down through the US border and back up. A massive fail for that. Still, it was only 6 quid, so not a great loss.
So, what I'm after is a good android (or ios, I assume that they've got to the point that multi platform is possible), satnav with downloaded maps, needing no net access, and has good Canadian maps. Otherwise its probably the price of a full satnav to rent one, which is basically a machine which goes "ping!" and personally no more trusted than the Copilot Premium.
I did look on amazon.co.uk for a tomtom with US maps, but the same potential fail and the world of satnav is ironically and weirdly, not very global...
On a previous trip we did San Jose to Yosemite with a Hertz hire car, and the o/h wanted a (relatively expensive) satnav with the car. I was ok with this but was hoping to show that the Galaxy S satnavs would be good enough. We hit Modesto, had a slight diversion due to road signs, and the google map route setup at the wifi at the hotel (I have no mobile data in the US, and its probably very expensive roaming, I don't want to take the chance) went haywire, so we were reliant on the Hertz satnav from the 90's...
Unfortunately its detail lacked and the destination of Wawona road for the Wawona hotel was actually an hour and a half long, which it navigated us to the north side (one and a half hour from the destination, google got it right, coming in from the south).
So now, with Canada she's wanting to know that if we are relying on a phone satnav, that its good. I've been told good things about Copilot Premium, had the uk one for 15 quid (full maps download, so no net needed) and it worked fine.
I downloaded the US maps last night, which claimed to include Canada, and did the basic test of Vancouver to Banff. Well, it appears the Canadian maps are really just 20 miles across the border and it seemed to think we'd have to go down through the US border and back up. A massive fail for that. Still, it was only 6 quid, so not a great loss.
So, what I'm after is a good android (or ios, I assume that they've got to the point that multi platform is possible), satnav with downloaded maps, needing no net access, and has good Canadian maps. Otherwise its probably the price of a full satnav to rent one, which is basically a machine which goes "ping!" and personally no more trusted than the Copilot Premium.
I did look on amazon.co.uk for a tomtom with US maps, but the same potential fail and the world of satnav is ironically and weirdly, not very global...