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2007-11-30
, 06:38
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Posts: 550 |
Thanked: 110 times |
Joined on Aug 2006
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#2
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The Following User Says Thank You to Rocketman For This Useful Post: | ||
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2007-11-30
, 06:50
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Posts: 1,743 |
Thanked: 1,231 times |
Joined on Jul 2006
@ Twickenham, UK
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#3
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2007-11-30
, 07:01
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Posts: 220 |
Thanked: 11 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
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#4
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2007-11-30
, 13:39
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Posts: 130 |
Thanked: 5 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ Maine & Florida - USA
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#5
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2007-11-30
, 13:52
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Posts: 529 |
Thanked: 46 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
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#6
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I have owned over 10 different Garmin Automotive GPSs since 2000.
When I got my Nokia N810, I was a little disappointed with the amount of time the internal GPS took to determine its location.
However, today I took the GPS with me in the car.
I was surprised to find that the did not have to be mounted near the windshield to continue knowing its location.
GPS remained locked on satellites when N810 was placed on passenger seat.
GPS remained locked on satellites when N810 placed antenna side down in my
shirt pocket while sitting in driver's seat.
GPS remained locked on satellites when placed in Nokia case with GPS antenna was placed next to the fully covered case corner and then placed upside down in my shirt pocket.
I walked into 2 stores and the N810 was able to maintain its location even though
1 - I was in a building
2 - N810 was in its case with the antenna covered.
3 - N810 was in my front pants pocket.
When I got home, I compared my N810 GPS to my Garmin 10X GPS.
The 10X uses the SiRFstar III chipset. This GPS chipset is typically considered the best chipset for automotive GPSs. It has fast satellite acquisition time and excellent ability to maintain satellite lock.
I get very bad GPS signal reception in my building. I have never been able to get any GPS to find its location in my house unless it was within 4 foot of one specific window and it had a SiRFstar III chipset.
I have tested about 5 Garmin and other brands of GPSs without the SiRFstar III chipset and they could never fix on a location under these conditions.
But this new Nokia N810 can get a fix. While it sometimes takes longer to do this than my Garmin 10X, once it gets a fix it stays connected and my even be better at keeping a signal when I move it further away from the window.
So, to me this is great news, the N810 GPS is excellent at knowing where it is located even under tough conditions, it just takes some extra time to startup.
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2007-11-30
, 18:25
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Posts: 477 |
Thanked: 118 times |
Joined on Dec 2005
@ Munich, Germany
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#7
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2007-11-30
, 19:01
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Posts: 160 |
Thanked: 7 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#8
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2007-12-01
, 02:20
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Posts: 22 |
Thanked: 3 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#9
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2008-01-10
, 12:22
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Posts: 883 |
Thanked: 980 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ Bern, Switzerland
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#10
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When I got my Nokia N810, I was a little disappointed with the amount of time the internal GPS took to determine its location.
However, today I took the GPS with me in the car.
I was surprised to find that the did not have to be mounted near the windshield to continue knowing its location.
GPS remained locked on satellites when N810 was placed on passenger seat.
GPS remained locked on satellites when N810 placed antenna side down in my
shirt pocket while sitting in driver's seat.
GPS remained locked on satellites when placed in Nokia case with GPS antenna was placed next to the fully covered case corner and then placed upside down in my shirt pocket.
I walked into 2 stores and the N810 was able to maintain its location even though
1 - I was in a building
2 - N810 was in its case with the antenna covered.
3 - N810 was in my front pants pocket.
When I got home, I compared my N810 GPS to my Garmin 10X GPS.
The 10X uses the SiRFstar III chipset. This GPS chipset is typically considered the best chipset for automotive GPSs. It has fast satellite acquisition time and excellent ability to maintain satellite lock.
I get very bad GPS signal reception in my building. I have never been able to get any GPS to find its location in my house unless it was within 4 foot of one specific window and it had a SiRFstar III chipset.
I have tested about 5 Garmin and other brands of GPSs without the SiRFstar III chipset and they could never fix on a location under these conditions.
But this new Nokia N810 can get a fix. While it sometimes takes longer to do this than my Garmin 10X, once it gets a fix it stays connected and my even be better at keeping a signal when I move it further away from the window.
So, to me this is great news, the N810 GPS is excellent at knowing where it is located even under tough conditions, it just takes some extra time to startup.
Last edited by ajax1; 2007-11-30 at 06:28.