"Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing." (granfury)
07/23/2020 at 13:20 • Filed to: None | 0 | 2 |
My car is a little older, and doesn’t have a fancy LCD in the dash. I tried a stereo with nav and DVD and all of the bells and whistles but I actually preferred the stock head unit and so I reinstalled it. My phone is also a little older (6S Plus) and isn’t going to be replaced anytime soon. Sure, i t can do navigation just fine, but I don’t have unlimited data and don’t want to use what I have for navigation. I’ve tried various solutions to the nav issue, including tablets with Google Maps in offline mode, and found that I really prefer using a dedicated GPS unit.
After a false start thanks to an eBay seller that didn’t disclose the damage to the GPS he sold me as part of a lot of allegedly working electronic goods (I did get a partial, although insufficient, refund) I bought a Garmin Drivesmart 65 with the big 7" screen. There’s something to be said for buying top -of-the-line. I can use it as a Bluetooth hands-free device (eliminating one or two gadgets in the car) , I can search for a destination on my phone and have it immediately send the info to the GPS, but the best part is that I can easily integrate a rear-view camera.
I already have a camera that’s built in to a license plate frame, but I never got around to installing it since I didn’t know what to use as a screen or how to easily get the signal up front. I then bought a wireless transmitter/receiver set, but I still needed to figure out a monitor solution. I’ve got various LCD screens I could use, but they wouldn’t integrate well into the car and might just be another target for thieves. The Garmin solution is wireless and uses the GPS as the display - perfect. And, if I was so inclined, I could add additional cameras, although I think I one will be sufficient. For now...
I love my car, but the view of the back isn’t great. Rather than banging into people’s cars I tend to leave what, from the drivers seat, seems like a minimal amount of space, but is usually more than six feet. This camera s hould finally eliminate that problem. I live right on the corner and my neighbors are usually pretty good about leaving me the space in front of my house, and I don’t want ruin that goodwill by tapping bumpers. About the only thing I could think of to make parallel parking even easier would be some sort of lighting along the lower right side of the car so that I can more easily see the curb in the mirror. I’ll have to do a quick search to see if there’s some sort of weatherproof, unobtrusive LED strip that I could wire into the backup lights, that I could hide down low below the rocket panel . It sounds like an odd solution but might just do the trick...
415s30 W123TSXWaggoIIIIIIo ( •_•))°)
> Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing.
07/23/2020 at 14:49 | 1 |
I always balked at those cameras because I had old cars, then I got my Acura and I like it in some situations, it’s kind of hard to see out the back of my sleek wagon.
WasGTIthenGTOthenNOVAnowbacktoGTI
> Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing.
07/23/2020 at 15:36 | 1 |
As someone who street parked every day in downtown Minneapolis for about a year, I can say with certainty, that even the best driver in the world will be made better with a backup camera.