Sat nav

old rockers replied on 21/05/2018 15:55

Posted on 21/05/2018 15:55

Hi.

I am looking to buy a new sat nav for our motor-home as the one i have in the car is no good as it keeps taking us down all weird and wonderful roads.

Could anyone advise me on what is the best one to purchase and what is a reasonable price.Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks. the old rockers 

 

Tinwheeler replied on 21/05/2018 16:03

Posted on 21/05/2018 16:03

Have you set your satnav to use the quickest (biggest) roads? If you set it to shortest it can take you across country as you seem to have found.

We have the club's camper edition of the Avtex Garmin Nuvi (because it came with the van) and it does seem superior to our old Garmin. Mighty pricey though.

young thomas replied on 21/05/2018 16:16

Posted on 21/05/2018 16:16

agree with TW. first thing check it's not set to shortest route.....it will cut a corner (down a microscopic road) just to save a few metres....

NickyKnix replied on 21/05/2018 16:27

Posted on 21/05/2018 16:27

Hi old rockers,

There is a Member offer in the May Club magazine on page 61 for the Avtex tourer one plus, which may be of interest.

Please click here to view the offer online.  The Avtex tourer has free map updates for life, 6" touchscreen and voice control, campsite directory, elevation warnings, fuel, food and Caravan and Motorhome Club places of interest.
It also includes road warnings for bridge heights, weight limits, sharp curves, steep grades and more, so it is tailored for touring.

briantimber replied on 21/05/2018 22:11

Posted on 21/05/2018 22:11

 Hi, OR,

The above is a mighty expensive bit of kitsurprised

I have a Garmin nuvi2595, with lifetime maps and traffic, purchased six years ago for just short of £100. I downloaded CC poi from this site plus CCC poi from their site, works a treat for me. No doubt there will be others with better buys who will come along and enlighten you, but with the right settings and common sense, plus an up to date road atlas, we haven't had any problems.

Remember, Sat Nav's aren't always right, and common sense is sometimes needed....cool

Tinwheeler replied on 21/05/2018 23:58

Posted on 21/05/2018 23:58

I agree, Brian. Common sense is essential.

We would never have bought the satnav we have if it hadn’t been included as standard in the MH. Ours doesn’t have the dash cam addition but acts as the screen for the dubious quality reversing camera and is still more money than needs to be spent to get something decent. 

jennyc replied on 22/05/2018 08:22

Posted on 22/05/2018 08:22

Have you considered abandoning your old style hardware altogether, and switching to your smartphone or pad for navigation mapping? Some Apps provide offline map storage and many are free. Google Maps gets excellent ratings and is free in its basic form. The biggest problem can be finding a stable mount for your dashboard. We use one piece self adhesive rubber mounts where the jaw has groves to adjust the phone’s  angle. Naturally you’ll need a cigar lighter power lead for longer journeys. We’ve switched to this style, starting with CoPilot, but switching again when they introduced charges. The flexibility to switch systems at no cost, along with easy upgrades is already making dedicated hardware obsolete.

peedee replied on 24/05/2018 17:34

Posted on 24/05/2018 17:34

I agree with Jenny, I have never had a standalone sat nav and have always just brought the software to run on my own hardware. I currently run Co-Pilot on a Samsung Android tablet. I got the mount for about £15 from Halfords. The caravan version is pretty good and it only cost me just under £30 when it was on offer. Not sure what the current price is.

peedee

p.s. the current price is >£34.99<

knotters replied on 15/06/2018 16:21

Posted on 15/06/2018 16:21

I am purchasing the latest Tomtom Camper (with 25 year mortgage!!!) after returning the latest Garmin 770 identical to the Avtex model. It wanted to take me down the smallest lanes as it seemed to believe you could achieve speeds of 50 MPH in car mode. Time was spent with their tech dept and a satisfactory result could not be obtained. I contacted Avtex to make sure their model wouldn't do the same and they seem to rely on Garmin to give answers. It had all the bells and whistles to impress me but if the unit cannot work as a reliable sat nav then there is no point.

hitchglitch replied on 15/06/2018 20:40

Posted on 15/06/2018 20:40

Don’t all the SatNavs use third party maps and algorithms? We have used our car SatNav and a free standing Garmin for thousands of miles in Europe. Neither are perfect.

near Malvern Hills Club Campsite Member photo by Andrew Cole

Book a late escape

There's still availability at many popular UK Club campsites - find your perfect pitch today for a last minute trip!

Book now
Woman sitting in camping chair by Wastwater in the Lake District with her two dogs and picnic blanket

Follow us on Facebook

Follow the Caravan and Motorhome Club via our official Facebook page for latest news, holiday ideas, events, activities and special offers.

Photo of Wast Water, Lake District by Sue Peace
Visit Facebook