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Forget satnav, if you want to know your way just ask

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Published Date: 11 July 2008
FIRST it directed the driver off the wrong exit at a roundabout, then sent him in circles round Glasgow and finally announced his car was halfway up a mountain near Fort William.
A navigational challenge from Land's End to John O'Groats appears to show that drivers should bin their satnavs and go back to maps and road signs – or just simply ask for directions.

A motorist relying on the electronic gadget was soundly beaten
in a road race to test which method was best.

The race was won by a team relying on road signs and locals' advice, followed by another using road maps. The satnav-guided car came last.

The 989-mile experiment, which involved finding 12 locations en route, was organised by Reader's Digest magazine.

The satnav-guided car finished one-and-a-half hours behind the map car – driven by women – which itself came in half an hour behind the winning signs-and-directions-led vehicle – driven by men.

Their route involved difficult-to-find places such as the Drunken Duck Inn in the Lake District and Bonawe Quarry near Oban.

The satnav team were hampered by the gadget alerting them to non-existent roundabouts and exits and directing them into "no entry" streets and along slow country lane "short cuts" rather than motorways. Simon Hemelryk, the satnav car driver, said its pronouncements became especially bizarre as they drove through Scotland.

He said: "In Glasgow, it made frequent attempts to make us turn right down streets where cars weren't actually allowed.

"Then it got very confused in the Highlands and couldn't tell which was mountain and which was road. On the A82 south of Fort William and north of Loch Ness, it would tell us we were halfway up the mountain we could see on our left."

Motoring groups warned drivers against over-reliance on such devices. Luke Bosdet, a spokesman for the AA, said: "Residents know where the snags and bottlenecks are, and in that respect there is no substitute for local knowledge.

"However, satnavs are more likely to stop drivers overshooting their next turn and have to go back round again. Theoretically, a combination of the two would be best. Unfortunately, many drivers become slaves to their satnavs – turning sharp right on to railway lines, rivers and, in one instance, a toilet on a German building site."

Sheila Rainger, the deputy director of the Royal Automobile Club Foundation, said: "Wise motorists plan ahead, using whichever method suits them best. Local knowledge is invaluable but not always available. A good satnav or map is like having a knowledgeable local in the car with you.

"Satnavs do make mistakes, but at least they will never say 'I wouldn't start from here', while maps don't need batteries."

Sarah Sands, the editor-in-chief of Reader's Digest, said: "It goes to show that when you're trying to find remote locations in the Lake District or navigate busy city centres, you're better off relying on the people who live there, rather than a line on a piece of paper or a computer."



The full article contains 523 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 10 July 2008 10:14 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

,

11/07/2008 04:06:37
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
2

Marcus Fenix,

The Valley 11/07/2008 08:03:58
I favour maps: it simply feels more of an adventure if you're looking at a map.
3

Louis Catorze,

11/07/2008 08:06:14
Map reading. It's hardly difficult.
4

M.Corleone,

2nd Vatican State..... Coatbridge 11/07/2008 08:15:58
I'm a man, I can't ask without getting lost first
5

spurtacus,

11/07/2008 08:21:52
I once asked a local for directions. I ended up in a toilet on a German building site: The bounder!
6

Foresight,

Bt the Water of Leith 11/07/2008 08:25:07

Now I know Gordon Brown's problem, the Sat Nav of Downing Street suffers from a significant malfunction.
7

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 11/07/2008 10:38:48
A Sat-Nav is an AID to navigation. It is not the be-all and end-all solution that many think it is. As well as a sat-nav, you need:-

1. Local knowledge
2. A map
3. Road signs
4. Ask for directions
5. Common sense

If you are going to sit there in your driving seat and blindly do everything the sat-nav tells you to then there is a fair chance you will get lost. They can get themselves into loops if one of the turnings it tells you to take is blocked off for some reason. This depends upon the algorithm used for routing. Good ones are less likely to do this than the cheaper variety.

At the end of the day, what is a sat-nav? It is a GPS receiver, accurate to about 100m (reliably), which superimposes its output onto an electronic map. This "locks" you into position on the nearest probable map location. It may not lock you on to the road you are actually following in some cases.

To find the route from A to B, various routing algorithms may be used. The better the unit, the better these algorithms are likely to be and the more likely the unit is to realise when you are being led round in circles.

Some units have settings to allow you to put parameters into the algorithms. For instance, fastest route, quickest route, avoid motorways, cycling, walking. Using the wrong setting may cause you to be told to drive your car down a disused railway track or along the tow-path of a canal---something which the more brain-dead amongst us will happily do.

I recently took the plunge and bought a sat-nav. Used in the way it is intended, it is a good bit of kit. However, I would not trust it implicitly.
8

WKKB,

11/07/2008 11:47:00
how old was the satnav's software? I know from experience it should be updated as new construction happens. Our satnav thought we were driving in the middle of a field and insisted we turn around at earliest convenience. Now that we've updated our software that problem has been eliminated.
9

David Norris,

11/07/2008 11:49:15
Hmm, my wife and I have spent the last week in London. Would never have done it, never mind contemplated it without sat nav. Of course a common sense check is needed with using any of these tools.
10

Upandunder,

11/07/2008 13:20:24
People who rely WHOLLY on satnav are in my opinion, either dense, lazy or both.

Then again, we live in a nation where some people, unbelievably, can't find on a map the location of their summer holiday. One young woman at work told me a few years ago at the office party she and her boyfriend went "to the Med". I asked where, and she replied: "Tenerife".

I just sighed and walked away. Peasant.
11

,

11/07/2008 14:55:48
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
12

Euan,

Edinburgh 11/07/2008 20:11:25
I had the Tom Tom telling me to do a u-turn on the M74 once.

I can tell you, these things really do get it wrong on a regular basis.

If you have one my advice is this: ALWAYS TRUST YOUR INSTINCTS and as the report says, if in doubt, use the map or just ASK someone!!

 

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