Idiot
|
what? Don't like the GPS or something?
|
maybe the gps is blocking too much the view
|
Quote:
And yes its a stupid place to mount it, that thing could hide a pedestrian, or motorcyclist or even a small car from view! You can't outlaw stupid!:mad: Jim |
I've owned some Fords over the years...for whatever reason, the placement of the rear view mirror is such that it can hide an 18-wheeler. A friend of mine first noticed this in his '74 Pinto Wagon, and I had the same problem in my '85 Continental and my '84 Town Car. Where that GPS is could cause the same problem.
In both the aforementioned Lincolns, I did have a compass suction-cupped to the windshield...but on the upper edge, well out of the way. It could be that the location this person chose was the only spot which got a good signal from the satellites... |
While he does have it pretty close to his line of sight from the driver's seat, which is stupid... EVERY one in the NKY/Cincy area mounts them on their windshield... most put it over by the A-pillar or to the right of the rear view mirror up high.
|
i put mine as close as i can to the bottom in the middle of the windshield on my s10.
those GPS can get signal in a glovebox or center consle so that aint the issue. the one time i had it in my chevette i just left it sittin by the gearshift. |
I've never seen a GPS that can get a decent signal without line-of-sight to at least part of the sky. Maybe GPS signals are stronger where you live?
That doesn't make it ok to put the GPS where it blocks your ability to see the road, though. If you can only get a signal by putting it there then you need an external antenna. https://www.tl-antennas.cn/images/pro...20TLC-1575.jpg |
My Garmin Nuvi is tucked as far down against the dashboard as the mount will allow. The part that is in my vision is no higher than, and in the same location as a hood orniment.
|
Quote:
now my handheld unit it can lose signal when u go in deep woods and bottom of ravines |
My Windows Mobile cell phones all have internal GPS receivers (and running Tom Tom Navigator 6), and the phones can get a lock sitting on the passenger seat, in the dashboard cradle, and even in the center console. I've never had a problem, and that's with phones, not dedicated GPS units.
|
I don't put mine on the windshield, I keep it tucked away. Then when I used it, I keep it on the seat next to me or in the armrest or something. Never had a signal problem.
|
I've actually seen a gps mounted at that level, but right in front of the driver.
I too have had no problem getting a signal in the car. |
afaik most cell phones use tower triangulation, not GPS. hence working without LOS to the satellites.
My GPS lives in the center of the window as low as it can go....below the hood line on all my cars (helps that I'm 6-4) |
As far as E911 is concerned, GSM cell phones (AT&T, T-Mobile) triangulate the callers position from the towers. CDMA phones (Sprint, Verizon) actually look for the satellites and transmit those coordinates to the 911 call center. Most GPS applications on cell phones use satellite navigation. For example, if I were to call 911 from my AT&T cell phone the network would triangulate my position and send it to the call center. When I run TomTom Navigator on my phone it reads the satellites.
|
https://lh4.ggpht.com/_4xQFBZJE2fI/S-...0/DSC05398.JPG
My NUVI from eyeball level. Blocks about as much of my vision as a hood ornament. |
I mount my phone on my dashboard...
https://forums.wirelessadvisor.com/at...t-dscf1586.jpg https://forums.wirelessadvisor.com/at...t-dscf1585.jpg |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:26 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8 Beta 1
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.