Had to laugh today, as I drove along Ipswich Motorway (SE Qld) through the roadwork. Electronic sign with the message "Roadsworks, please read the signes, your GPS won't work"
All very well, if you happen to be looking at the electronic sign.....
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Pay it forward - what goes around comes around
DUNMOWIN is no longer on the road and still DUNMOWIN!
Our GPS doesnt know a highway from a paddock... Her name is Hilda, she came with the Prado 4 years ago, and was out of date before we bought it. (Not possible to upgrade without spending lotsa $$$) Shes got a posh accent, we enjoy telling her to shut up occasionally.
Our GPS has nearly ended up out the window on more ocassions than I care to rememeber, but we think we have 'her' name down pat - Suzie, but quite often, it is Suzie Wong!!!
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Pejay are travelling in a 2014 Holden Colorado LTZ Twin Cab Ute + 2013 Coromal Element van
You can't blame your GPS if there is new roads and your GPS has not been upgraded , if they have the right information programed in they they will always perform
You can't blame your GPS if there is new roads and your GPS has not been upgraded , if they have the right information programed in they they will always perform
Sorry to disillusion you brickies but my Tom Tom, which I no longer own, I now have A Garmin. My Tom Tom with the latest map update at the time told me to turn into a paddock full of sheep on a perfectly straight road without any turn offs for well over 60klms.
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If I don't get there today, I'll get there tomorrow or the day after.
John & Irona..........Rockingham Western Australia
Our GPS is called Sally. She's not too bad but does get the occasional route wrong. Has come in handy in the cities though. Give me the outback anyday.
Ma one nibble at the bush and you sure don't want to go near big cities , drove to the gold coast 6 mts. ago don't want to go there again but would go bush tomorrow
we were driving along in SA one day on our way home, happily following "Vicki" and then all of a sudden she wants us to turn around and go the way just came, for no darn reason, ..
You are on the money there brickies. The coast from Mackay down to Kiama will be a no go zone for us when possible.
We had two glorious weeks in Chinchilla and then had to go over to the coast, we got to Gympie and thought there are too many people, too many cars, too many trucks and went and found a little "freebie" as far away as possible from suburbia.
The GPS are programed from a master map which may have included proposed roads or road that have been officially closed , WE live in a huge country all in all they get it right most of the time if it tell you to drive into a river and you follow it command you should hand in your license in
The GPS are programed from a master map which may have included proposed roads or road that have been officially closed , WE live in a huge country all in all they get it right most of the time if it tell you to drive into a river and you follow it command you should hand in your license in
I suppose we should tell that to the foreign tourists who blindly followed the instructions from their GPS and ended up down some outback dirt track where they became hopelessly bogged and needed to be rescued.
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If I don't get there today, I'll get there tomorrow or the day after.
John & Irona..........Rockingham Western Australia
i am one of the poor unfortunates that has to commute each day on the Ipswich motorway. each day you wonder if the road will be still in the same place it was yesterday. Am certainly looking forward to the day when i hitch up my van and head bush
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On a road less travelled, finding my own way home.
These gadgets are usually programmed overseas somewhere, by people who've never left their own country. They base it on survey maps and satellite images. My "Tom" is a dirty little bugger who tries to mislead me into the scrub where there is no road. Probably a surveyed road which was never developed. If you have a navigator sitting in the passenger seat next to you reading the map, it's a lot easier to compare information from the GPS. When you're on your own and depending on the damn gadget when you're in a strange place, it could lead you to even stranger places. I check the map before I take off, and again when I stop for a break, and put the information in my own memory banks and match it up with Tom's information. I've upgraded Tom, free online recently. Don't ask me how I did it, because it used to cost about $140. However, I did it. We just can't take anything for granted. Do your own preparation to be on the safe side.
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20ft Roma caravan - Mercedes Benz Sprinter - SA-based at the moment. Transport has no borders.
Management makes the decisions, but is not affected by the decisions it makes.