I already did a que sheet off of Google and I did one on mapmyride.com, I was just thinking about actually GPS, saw prices and thought I would see if anyone had any ideas. Yeah, my bank is pretty small, and paper is cheaper!!
I already did a que sheet off of Google and I did one on mapmyride.com, I was just thinking about actually GPS, saw prices and thought I would see if anyone had any ideas. Yeah, my bank is pretty small, and paper is cheaper!!
~~Help me in the fight to cure diabetes, by either joining my team, "The Freedom Riders" at http://main.diabetes.org/goto/thefreedomriders, or by donating at http://main.diabetes.org/goto/jake for the Tour de Cure in Indianapolis, Indiana on June 12, 2010~~
In case anyone's keeping score, I checked and it turns out I misspoke, two of the NĂ¼vi units are actually waterproof. They're both $300. The cheaper ones (starting at $119) are not.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
I have been using a Garmin 305 for the past 3 years and really like it as a bike computer as well as a navigating device. It doesn't have actual mapping capabilities like the fancier 705, but you can upload a route and it will give you a bread-crumb trail to follow and turn-by-turn directions. You can get a refurbished one with one year warranty for about $180, new with cadence and heart monitor for aobut $250.
If this is going to be your commute, you will have it memorized in 2 or maybe 3 days.
Ride, not GPS!
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson