Archive for November, 2009

Garmin Nuvi 780 Reviews, Best Prices, Compare

Monday, November 30th, 2009
Garmin Nuvi 780

Product: Garmin Nuvi 780

List Price: $699.99
Average customer review:

Amazon Price: Too low to display
Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see low price@CHAADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping Available

Compare Prices on Garmin Nuvi 780


This is my first automobile GPS, and I did a lot of research before settling on the Garmin 780. I live in the Washington DC Metro area, so all of the extra features work here. Upon its arrival, I downloaded and installed the latest Garmin WebUpdater v.2.41 and then updated my 780 from software version 2.50 to 2.90. I also updated the Bluetooth and other firmware, along with the languages that I use. This all worked flawlessly in a Windows XP virtual machine on a Linux host. FWIW, the 780 will charge off of the supplied USB cable.

The 780 acquired the necessary satellites in just a few minutes when first activated, and does so in less than a minute for subsequent activations. I found the screen brightness to be fine for both day and night. I’m using the 780 with the Garmin Portable Friction Mount. Smashing windows and stealing GPS devices is the sport of choice in the DC Metro area, so I wanted no evidence of a GPS extant when I left the car. The friction mount works perfectly on my Honda Accord dashboard and stores easily in the center console, leaving no trace of a GPS behind. Very cool. The 780 easily fits in a shirt pocket, so it’s not necessary to leave it in the car.

I tested the 780 immediately by driving during rush hour to a residence across the river in a tangle of park roads off of the beaten track, then returning at night. The Garmin had no trouble creating a very fast route to the destination that bypassed most of the heavy traffic during rush hour. On my return, I bypassed a turn on its preferred routing. It recalculated a new route in less than a second which was the exact right answer. The new route wasn’t a recapture of the original route, which wasn’t possible from that location, but an entirely new route. The routes it picked were appropriate for the times of day traveled, which can be a daunting task here if you don’t know which roads go which direction during the appropriate rush hour. DC is a notoriously difficult area to navigate, but so far the Garmin seems up to the challenge.

I found the volume of the internal speaker to be more than adequate even with the radio, air conditioning, and windshield wipers going. Voice notifications led upcoming turns by an adequate amount, and the voice prompts always helped me get into the correct lanes in plenty of time for upcoming turns. During a particularly tricky section where several major roads converge on a bridge, then diverge on the other side, the Garmin gave almost constant appropriate guidance to ensure that I took the correct forks and turns. I was quite impressed.

The Bluetooth paired quickly with my Motorola Razr V3. It even provided its PIN code at the appropriate time. The phone functions work great and it’s easy to hear over the 780 speaker. The party on the other side of the phone said that I sounded like I was in a tunnel, which is typical for remote devices for autos. I have another BT hands-free device and it garnered the same comments. The Garmin’s on-screen phone cues make hands-free easy.

Activation of the MSN Direct service was simple over the Net. On initial activation of your free 3 month trial, they offer a 6-month extension for $9.95 which gets you to 9 months of service total for less than $10–a very good deal. MSN Direct information took a while to load the initial information, but then it said that in the Quick Start pamphlet. Once loaded, the traffic, weather, and news worked great. Gas prices were behind by several days, which is an eternity these days. My favorite (and cheapest) station wasn’t listed.

Overall, I’m very happy with the 780. I’ll be working it out heavily in the coming weeks, including on a road trip to another city with MSN Direct service. I can’t believe that I waited this long to take the plunge to a GPS device for my car. Even though I’m a master with maps, the Garmin suggested a clever routing that I did not previously discover on my own. From what I’ve seen so far, the 780 will be a highly valued addition to my road warrior kit bag. I can recommend the 780 without reservation.

I purchased a Sony NAVU-83T, a Garmin 680, and a Garmin 780 to compare their features and routing capability. I kept the 780 and returned the others, but it was a very difficult decision.

The Sony unit [...] at Costco, and has a 4.8″ screen (1/2″ larger!). It has one of the best user interfaces on the market, primarily due to a few things: 1) you can always get back to the map by pressing one button, regardless of where you are, 2) you can always get to the main menu by pressing one button, regardless of where you are in the menus, 3) it has a split screen function that gives you lane guidance visually so that you know which lane to get into, well before the turn, 4) it has shortcuts, for instance to GO HOME you make a V shape on the screen and it takes you home…no menu navigation required!

On the down side, the Sony took FOREVER to calculate or re-calculate routes, and in many cases I missed the newly recalculated turn because it took too long to figure it out. It also took longer routes than the Garmin, would avoid commonly used roads for no apparent reason, and would not take me down roads that were shown on the map and clearly the shortest route. Last of all, the Sony took forever to gain a satellite fix once turned on. And the Sony mount was soooo very cool and useful! For $249 you got the cool mount and a nice carrying case. I did not get a chance to use the TMC traffic service.

The Garmin 680 ($349 at Costco) was a fine device, with very fast and accurate routing. It found points of interest quickly and accurately (the Sony often could not find them). However, I really liked the thin size of the 780 and the fact that the antennae was built in, so I kept the 780 in spite of the extra cost.

What do I like about the 780 (and the 680):

1. The MSN Direct is VERY handy and I use it every day for weather, news, fuel costs, and movie listings.

2. Very fast route calculations.

3. I have never looked for a POI that was not present.

4. The tour routes that you can download (for about $12 each) are cool. You can take car tours of a few hours that are laid out for you, telling you where to visit along the route.

5. The ability to sort points along a route is handy. If you have 10 places to go in one day, enter them all in and it puts them in the most efficient order.

6. It can find rest areas on interstates. The Sony could NOT do this, which is annoying when you are trying to figure out if you should stop at a gas station or wait for a rest area when you have three kids in the car on long trip.

What would I change on the 780? Many things, and most of them would cost Garmin no money to implement. These are simple fixes that they should consider!

Bad Points of the Garmin 780:

1. If I go into the menu system, I can go 7 or 8 layers deep to get to what I want to do. To get back to the map, I have to keep pushing the “BACK” button, up to 8 times in a row, to get back to the map. Stupid!

2. If I go into a menu item and decide I’m done, but don’t want to push “BACK” over and over, the unit stays on the menu or submenu screen forever.

3. It would seem that on a unit this expensive it could give you lane guidance. The Sony does. The Tom Tom does. Why can’t this unit, at almost double the cost?

4. When you turn off the car the unit asks if it should stay on or turn off. If you don’t answer, it turns off in 30 seconds. For people who are making deliveries, or running errands, this is a real pain. It would be nice to allow you to configure this once to set how long it should wait before turning the unit off (options like 1 minute, 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 20 minutes, for instance). This would allow you to run into Kinkos and back out again without having to wait for the unit to turn back on, get a satellite bearing, and then finally get to its map to tell you where to go next. Simple software change!

5. It would be nice to have the unit start up on the same screen where you left off. If you were on the map screen, then it should return to the map screen. If on the weather screen, then return to the weather. I like to keep it on the weather, but I have to hit about 6 different buttons every time I turn the unit on to get to the weather! Simple software change!

6. Most GPS units even at half this cost allow you to SEE your speed, direction, and target’s relative direction while on the main map screen. This unit requires you to go to a dashboard screen to show you this information….so you have to choose the map or the dashboard to view. Since some people may not like this feature, it could be configurable. Simple software change!

7. I can’t seem to figure out how to show the satellite signals/connectivity. ALL units have this, even though it is just for fun.

8. For $500 the Garmin should include a carry case for the unit. They sell it small size, light weight, and its “ability to know where you were when you take it out of the cradle, to help you find your car later”, and yet don’t give you way to carry it around safely. Just about every unit on the market, starting at the $149 units, include a case!

9. The 780 does NOT include an owners manual. You have to go online to view the manual, at garmin.com. Garmin may be surprised to know that not everyone has the internet (50% of homes don’t). Although not perfect, the Sony included a fairly comprehensive start up guide and a CD based owners manual.

10. The display looks like a cartoon movie, and that causes a lack of detail. The Sony displayed a very concise map where you could actually identify road splits, acceleration lanes, etc.

11. There is no ability to show POIs on the map. You can route to one, but you can’t just show them. The Sony allowed you to pick which POIs to show, and it actually showed you little BP, Shell, Cracker Barrel, etc. logos on the map so that you could know well ahead of time which POIs were near you.

12. Many units tell you how far to your next turn AND the direction you will be turning in. The Garmin tells you how far to the next turn, but it does not tell you which way to turn until you get within about 2/10 of a mile. So on most multi-lane roads I find myself staying in the middle lane as I get close so that I can go either way. It should warn you which way you will be turning at least a few miles in advance! As soon as you get onto any road the Sony tells you that your next turn is “LEFT 123 MILES”, and it is always displayed on the main map. Handy. Simple software change!

I like the unit, but I only give it 3 stars because of its price, its lack of common sense features, and lack of “in the box” support. It’s strong points are fast, accurate routing and MSN direct.

I did a lot of research before I changed from my old Garmin c340. I think I made an excellent choice, this GPS has everything and more. I was new to traffic so I first tried the TomTom 920T which I didn’t like because of how innacurate the maps were so then I turned to Garmin and I was happy again, with the addition of news, stocks and events for the MSN direct 2 version is great. I read the news once in a while is just a plain summary of what is happening not much with no pictures or anything but hey at least it gives you something else on the GPS to do. I find the mp3 functionality great the sound is loud enough just don’t put it all the way to 100% volume because you’ll hear static. The FM transmitter is one of the best I found on a GPS and the picture feature is great I even put it in my room as an LCD screen for pictures hehehe. This GPS gives you all the directions you need pretty accurate, MSN traffic needs to improve on this, its usually delayed most of the time it tells me traffic is there but then I find no traffic why? I don’t know but I can say that is probably 80% right on other traffic updates. I really like this product and I am more than happy with this item, it is now a lot cheaper than what I bought it for which was $700, so do yourself a favor if you want an accurate, nice looking, fast GPS signal, great feature GPS get this one, I recommend it.

Makita 9227CX3 Black Friday Discount!

Saturday, November 28th, 2009
Makita 9227CX3

Product: Makita 9227CX3

List Price: $408.00
Average customer review:

Amazon Price: Too low to display
Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see low price@CHAADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping Available

Compare Prices on Makita 9227CX3


Excellent tool. The polisher is easy to control once you get the hang of it. It easily, quickly, and with plenty of power applied the liquid car wax I was using. The tool felt well balanced and well behaved. The speed control is delightful to experience – maintains the same speed under load or no load conditions.

The tool came with two bonnets, one to apply compound and another for final polishiing. The compounding bonnet is the only one I used since I discovered this same bonnet also polishes to a deep luster as the wax you’re applying hazes over – the bonnet polishes this haze to nice deep shine. I also used a small spray bottle of water to wet small areas to help spread the wax – it worked great. I am ordering two new compounding bonnets for spares. Suggest you test out the bonnets and find out for yourself before ordering more….

I am really happy with this tool, and I feel it is well worth the money. I highly recommend it to anyone looking to buy a similar tool.

The Makita 9227 buffer is one of the top two if not the best available. It has more than enough power and with the electronic speed control, maintains RPMs even when putting pressure on the tool if used as a sander/grinder. The handle is probably the best feature of this tool, giving you great control when buffing/polishing.

Great polisher,easy to use,plenty of power,I would highly recomend the polisher to anyone.I dont like the polishing pads that came with it(they work good but get fuzz everywhere)I planned on getting foam pads anyway.

Great web site Amazon

Hewlett-Packard CB534AR#ABA Compare, Reviews, Discounts

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009
Hewlett-Packard CB534AR#ABA

Product: Hewlett-Packard CB534AR#ABA

List Price: $509.00
Average customer review:

Amazon Price: Too low to display
Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see low price@CHAADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping Available

Compare Prices on Hewlett-Packard CB534AR#ABA


The copy and scan functions are outstanding — quick, quiet, and easy to use. Scanning to Adobe files is remarkably simple. Faxing, though, is another story. The fax wizard will not install on Vista 64 bit systems, so fax send functions are limited to what you can do manually. More frustrating, it is impossible to receive faxes with an answering machine connected. I have spent many hours speaking with technicians in India to solve the problem. They diagnose the problem being the answering machine, but changing the answering machine did not help. This was not an issue with my five year old HP Office Jet. And the 1522 is not covered by HP on-line help. So my advice is to think about your needs before buying. If you have Vista 64 bit or use this on anything other than a dedicated fax line, beware.

Please note: In order to post this review, I HAD to give this printer one star. This printer deserves NO STARS.

The HP1522nf had everything I was looking for–Fax, Scan, laser printing, feeder, PPM requirements–and what I thought was HP quality. Although we purchased it from Amazon.com on 4/17, the printer was not placed into use until 5/1 because we were still in construction mode on our business. On May 1, I spent several hours on the phone with HP tech support…in India…and I couldn’t understand most of what they said. Worse, they couldn’t understand *me.* And I speak very clearly.

I was told that the printer could not be plugged into a surge protector–has to be plugged straight into the wall, and they eventually decided that I needed to download the printer software from HP’s website to cure the fact that the printer simply would not operate after printing one page.

I uninstalled the software that I’d installed from HP’s disc. The problem here is that the uninstall doesn’t remove all of the software it’s installed. It leaves tons of junk on the computer. I reinstalled with the fresh download and the printer worked for about a week. The scan and FAX functions refused to work, but I had a business to open and didn’t have time to sit on the phone with HP tech support for hour after hour.

On May 20th, I called HP tech support and the first question I asked was why they had never checked back with me as they said they’d do. The response was that they’d closed the file as “successfully handled” because (they claimed) when tech support tried to call me back, they found my number disconnected. My number was NOT disconnected, but the number they were calling had absolutely not one digit in common with my number.

I spent two days on the phone with tech support, uninstalling and reinstalling the software over and over, coaxing the printer to please do something right, trying to understand what the HP tech support people were saying… It was MEGA-frustrating.

The problems? The printer would print once, and then turn itself off. HP absurdly placed the switch in the back (lower left side), so in order to power cycle the printer, it’s really handy if you know how to do yoga. However, power cycling it would do nothing after awhile. The printer turned itself off and stayed off.

HP tech support asked me to FAX them the receipt, which I did (before the printer finally decided to stay dead), and HP’s tech support had the gall to complain that it was too blurry to read. Having been sent with one of their printers and received on their equipment, the quality of the FAX would be HP’s problem–not mine.

The machine would not scan. Trying to run the scan software resulted in a pop-up window telling me that the scan had failed, did I want to try again. It never scanned.

The computer I installed the software on unfortunately runs Vista. I asked if this could be the problem. HP tech support thought not. However, when trying to input data into the FAX feature on the computer, I ran into a series of annoying problems. For example, inputting the business name required that I input one letter and then the HP software would spit up a yellow caution sign window with the letter and a question mark. I’d click “OK,” and then enter another letter, at which point HP software would spit up the same yellow caution sign with the new letter and a question mark. I’d click “OK”…and this is how the entire business name had to be entered! One letter at a time and no spaces. Hitting the space bar would bounce the cursor back to the beginning. I kludged that problem by inserting an underscore between words. It’s insane!

Finally HP tech support decided it was a bad printer and that they needed to replace my brand new straigh-out-of-the-box printer with a used refurbished one! That’s when I blew up. And that’s when HP lost me as a customer.

I complained vociferously. They said they’d review the issues, but replacing with a used refurbished unit was all HP policy allows.

I wrote scathing emails to HP tech support and to HP’s CEO (whose email address is on the HP website if you’re patient enough to search for it). I decided to cc Amazon.com as well.

Next morning, I received a wonderful email from Amazon telling me that due to the extenuating circumstances, they’d already shipped me a new printer and sent a label for the return of the non-functional unit. Amazon ROCKS!

Then I received a call from HP tech support telling me in pidgin English that they’d reviewed the situation and would send me a used refurbished unit. It was great fun to tell them to go pound sand.

My new printer arrived as scheduled. I spent hours on my computer–weeding through folders, uninstalling every particle of HP software I could find–looking in hidden folders (they’re in there too), as well as taking ownership of items and changing permissions in order to dump eons of the nasty buggers. I plugged the printer INTO THE WALL RECEPTICLE. I installed the software from a fresh download.

It works. It FAXes. (The first two FAXes failed, but after that it worked. I still had to enter the business name header one letter at a time, each letter followed by the annoying sign and clicking “OK.”) It scans. It prints. It doesn’t turn itself off. BUT–after reading these reviews, I have to wonder how long this “success” will hold.

I wish I’d bought any other brand printer. Brother printers seem to be garnering good reviews, but based on past experience with having to kick those suckers to print, I decided against Brother. Epson seems to be having success. Really, ANYTHING has to be better than an HP printer.

Until HP gets its act together with technically-correct software and printers that work, and more importantly–MOVES THEIR TECH SUPPORT BACK TO THE UNITED STATES–I refuse to do business with them. I’ve bought probably 10 HP printers over the past few years. Maybe more. I don’t mind spending a little time on the phone with tech support for minor issues. But in the past two years–it’s happened with every single printer with every single set-up, and it’s gotten old. So long, HP. Your printers don’t work. Your software doesn’t work. And your tech support is atrocious.

This machine is on sale for a reason: It’s an incredibly bad product from an equally bad company.

The fax from the computer feature doesn’t always dial until the dial tone switches to the “if you’d like to make a call” message. So at least half the faxes have to be reloaded.

Unfortunately the English-challenged “support” in India has no idea what that message is, so it was not until I asked for a “supervisor” did anyone understand the problem.

The suggestion was to update the firmware and drivers. I did and now I can’t install the fax functions at all.

In the middle of this, the printer flashed a “replace black toner” message and won’t print until I fork over another $79.00 for a new cartridge. The existing one is not showing any signs of needing replacement. HP has rigged the sensor to their advantage.

I have purchased mostly HP printers in the past. Of course, this will be my last.

Garmin NUVI 500 Best Price, Reviews, Compare

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009
Garmin NUVI 500

Product: Garmin NUVI 500

List Price: $499.99
Average customer review:

Amazon Price: Too low to display
Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see low price@CHAADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping Available

Compare Prices on Garmin NUVI 500


Let me start by saying that I currently own and use several different GPS units: Garmins Nuvi 750, Colorado 400t, Rino 130 (a pair), Magellan 1470 and a Dash Express (I’ve also owned Garmins 2720, 2820, Nuvi 350, and a 60CSx in the recent past). I have so many of them because I use them for different purposes:

* Automobile navigation: I travel all over the country and always take a GPS with me for use in my rental cars.

* Walking in urban areas: I love to stroll around great cities and a good GPS not only keeps me from getting lost, it helps me to find areas of interest.

* Hiking in rural areas: As a birdwatcher I find a hand-held GPS receiver essential. Getting lost in the desert or the woods is no fun at all.

* Bicycling: I love to just bike and then try to figure out how to get home later. A GPS makes it easy to find my way back.

* Geocaching: A wonderful hobby that involves finding things that others have hidden using coordinates posted on the web. A GPS is an absolute necessity if you want to do this.

So, why did I buy yet another Garmin, the Nuvi 500? It is a part of my eternal search for one GPS receiver that is appropriate for all of these endeavors. It is important to understand that no GPS is perfect, nor is any one model ideal for everything. However, some accomplish some tasks well but are useless for others. The Nuvi 500 (and it’s brother the 550) are useful for all of my needs.

Instead of comparing it to other models that are more specialized, let me grade the Nuvi 500 in how well in works ,right out-of-the-box, for each task that I wanted it for:

* Automobile navigation: B-

There are much better units for this purpose if that is all you are going to use it for. Still, it gets you there. One major feature that I missed at first in the Nuvi 500 was Text-To-Speech (or TTS). This is where the unit pronounces the names of streets and roads. With it a GPS will say “Turn right on Broadway Street”. Without TTS is will say “Turn right at the next street”. However, in March of ‘09 Garmin released a firmware update that gives the nuvi 500 this feature! I have downloaded it to mine and it works just like my nuvi 750 (make sure that you download some TTS voices as well). I assume that new units will have this already installed. Still, the display is somewhat small for an automotive GPS, especially if the dash is deep and far from the driver. Although you can buy an optional FM traffic receiver, some units, like the Dash Express, have this feature built-in, plus it can connect via the internet and get real-time traffic info. My Garmin 2820 has built in satellite radio, however it is pretty big and needs to be plugged in.

* Walking in urban areas: A

Here is where the Nuvi 500 shines. First, it is small enough to fit in a pocket (although I do wish that it was thinner) yet it’s big enough to see the display without squinting. However, my favorite feature is the user-switchable batteries. Most GPS receivers use built-in rechargeable batteries; nice but when they run down you either have to find a place to plug it in and recharge it or you are stuck without a usable GPS. The Garmin Nuvi 500’s back opens up and the expended battery can be swapped out with a fresh one. This is a HUGE benefit for anyone using a GPS in any place other than a car. Another nice feature for the urban tourist is that you can download photos from a special web-site and not only see them on the Nuvi it will give directions to where the photo was taken. Cool.

* Hiking in rural areas: B

The Nuvi is not as ergonomic as those units designed to be hand held. It is a flat, rectangular device without a textured surface, still it is very usable outdoors. What I like about the 500 is that it comes loaded with both City Navigator and Garmin’s Topo Map (the 550 does has more North American coverage but does not have topographical coverage). Both units feature “digital elevation model” (DEM) mapping which shows you shaded contours at higher zoom levels, however, the Topo maps will show much, much more. Details like elevations, streams, small bodies of water, trails, landmarks and many other features that can really be useful when you are out in the boonies.

* Bicycling: A

I had my Garmin Colorado mounted on my Trek 7300 bike and although it looked funny (I have photos of it on Amazon’s Colorado 400t page) it worked O-K. Still, it did not come with the same type of street maps that the Nuvi does (I could have purchased it for about $100 and downloaded it onto the Colorado if I wanted to) and it was not as intuitive to use as the Nuvis are. Also, the Nuvi 500 really looks nice on my handlebars. Since it is waterproof (as is the Colorado) you don’t have to worry about a rainstorm.

* Geocaching: B+

If you haven’t geocached and don’t ever plan on doing it then you might want to skip this part of my review. However, if you are on of the many thousands that enjoy this growing hobby (over 800,000 geocaches have been placed worldwide) this is a GPS that can take you from your driveway to the cache and back effortlessly. Like the Colorado (and similar models such as the Oregon) you can download cache information directly to the GPS. Other Garmins can download the coordinates but the Nuvi 500 (and the 550) will display the cache information, hints, logs and just about everything that you need to successfully find what you are looking for. You can also record the results of your search (found, did not find, needs repair, etc.) for later transfer to the geocaching website. I’ve used the Nuvi 500 to find caches and it took me right to it. I’ll still use my Colorado but if I only want to take one GPS with me, it’ll be the 500.

Additional things that I like:

The Nuvi 500 lets you change your mode of travel (car, bike or on-foot) from the main page. It will then customize you directions based on your mode of transport icon (for instance, you can navigate one-way streets much differently on bike or on foot vs. by car). Another nice touch is when you choose a destination a little tab slides out from the “Go!” icon on the screen which shows your Usage Mode (car, bike, etc.) the Distance and the Time based on your chosen mode of travel. My 750 does not have this feature. Another thing that I like is that you can easily program the Nuvi 500 for on-road or off-road use. If you are traveling on foot you are not restricted to directions that require you to stick to the streets.

Somethings that I am not crazy about:

The specs list the battery life as “up to” 8 hours. I set the backlight to 50% and got 5 hours of use. Still very usable and with a second battery (which I bought with the unit and highly recommend) you can get 10 hours of continuous use without needing to recharge it or turn off the backlight completely. I also wish that the housing had a textured finish on the outside edge, giving you something to help you to keep your grip.

One final gripe: I can understand why Garmin does not include the AC charger with other Nuvi models but this one should really come with one. After all, it’s billed as a multifunctional GPS, not an automotive GPS.

I am very happy with my new Garmin. I will be recommending this unit to all of my geocaching, birdwatching and bicycling friends. If you’re are looking for a GPS that does it all, so far this one is the best.

UPDATE 12/03/08: The price has dropped quite a bit since I purchased it only a month ago. Now the value is even better! Grab it while you can. TR

This unit is fairly nice, but its more of an on-the-road GPS. It has a terrific 3D view and works well at guiding you down the road. It does lack any way of holding it when in the back country though, and has no screen lock for when you throw it in your backpack, so the touch screen goes nuts while in the pack. It also only comes with the 1:100K TOPO’s which are about as useless as they get in the woods, and at the moment Garmin has no TOPO 1:24K maps for the NorthEast, and you have to purchase those separately. There is support for Raster images, but no way to create Raster Maps, which would be a major plus if we could load on USGS 24K maps, which are superior to the ones Garmin uses. I also found the Address lookup ability, which a GPS unit should excel at, was quite useless. There just isnt enough addresses in the unit, it has serious troubles when looking up small towns addresses. I have a legal address and zip code and it refuses to accept it. It will suggest the next town over, or a location several miles from my home, and this is normal for all Garmin’s. I find this annoying, because like I said, this should be its strong suit, it is a GPS unit afterall.

I did find some custom made 1:24K maps online, and they are pretty good, but no where near as good as the USGS. Its a good unit, but they didnt think it thru very well, maybe the next generation of this unit will fair better.

Things that need to be changed or added:

1) Should come with 1:24K Maps

2) They need to get the Raster ability working so we can load USGS 1:24K

3) Address lookups need to be updated/expanded and more accurate(This is a real let down right now)

4) Needs a place to hookup up a strap so you have a way to secure it while carrying it around.

5) Desperately needs a Screen Lock, even Garmin’s vehicle units have this, but a Cross-Over unit that spends its time in the woods/backpacks doesnt?

6) Should be smaller, its just a little to large to carry around or hold.(Maybe adding the ability to turn the unit and have the screen view turn with you, its easier to hold the unit the long way)

I bought the Nuvi 500 to replace my tried-and-true Garmin StreetPilot i3.

One of my primary considerations is WATERPROOFness… my i3 has worked great on my MOTORCYCLE touring adventures, but when the rains came, it was either in the tank bag, or in a clear sandwich bag, held in place with a rubber band – not ideal.

There are motorcycle-specific GPS receivers, but they are all significantly more expensive. Frankly, I was attracted to the multi-purpose nature of this model. I’ve used it for motorcycle rides (just trial runs so far), bicycling, hiking/walking, and driving. I’m confident there are better solutions for each individual use – if you can afford a CAR GPS, and a HIKING GPS, and a MOTORCYCLING GPS, and a BOATING GPS, knock yourself out. The Nuvi 500 seems to do a very adequate job at all of that stuff.

Another feature I was looking for – and the Nuvi 500 has it – is the ability to enter a very specific ROUTE into it, and expect accurate directions. (When I’m motorcycle touring, it’s all about the JOURNEY, not the DESTINATION. I want to plan the journey, rather than leaving it to GPS-receiver silicon. I could plan my routes using the i3, but it was a matter of entering up to 50 waypoints, and then selecting each one in sequence. Now I can just tell it to “follow route Day 2,” and off we go.)

It has “modes” for automobile, bicycle, boating, and walking. (With a myriad of avatar options… when you’re hiking, you can use some little blue trudging feet to indicate your current location. Cute!) Also, with a firmware upgrade (readily available at the Garmin website) you can add “Scooter” mode. (I’m guessing they don’t have a “Motorcycle” mode for it, because they hope motorcycle riders will opt instead for the significantly-more-pricey Zumo models. But how different could “motorcycle” and “scooter” be, other than the gay factor? That’s just a joke… scooters are great!)

This model doesn’t have some of the other features found on a lot of high-end models. If you want a unit that speaks street names, or plays your MP3 tunes, or doubles as a cell phone or bluetooth… this may not be the one for you.

My only suggestion for Garmin would be – add a place to attach a lanyard/safety-tether! It would be nice, particularly when hiking, to be able to hang this around the neck, or attach it to a backpack with a carabiner. (Or to safety-strap it to the bicycle or motorcycle!)

Based on my experience, Garmin is VERY oriented toward customer service and satisfaction. They have bent over backwards to keep THIS customer happy. (That’s a nice bonus to the fact that they make an excellent product.)

Beltronics GX65 Prices, Reviews, Sales, Compare

Monday, November 23rd, 2009
Beltronics GX65

Product: Beltronics GX65

List Price: $499.95
Average customer review:

Amazon Price: Too low to display
Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see low price@CHAADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping Available

Compare Prices on Beltronics GX65


The Beltronics GX65 is the best radar detector that I have ever owned. I have had many over the years including the Valentine V1. Although this is a good detector, the GX65 gives me more warning on the signals that matter as well as not having to worry about listening to it go off for the wrong reason (You tell it what you want to not listen to). The other thing that is great about this detector is the pre-warning it gives when you are approaching a red-light camera. It tells you exactly where these are before it is too late.

Very well built, you can immediately tell you are not buying a product that skimps on material. The GX65 also comes with a very well written owners manual that is easy to understand.

Recommend very highly!!

I’ve driven with the GX65 for several months now and it is without a doubt my favorite dectector and I’ve owned many! The GPS feature allows me to lock out annoying false alerts, plus the built-in database is preloaded with all the red light and speed camera locations popping up everywhere. These annoying camera locations alert in plenty of time to check things out in advance. $29.95 extra for the 3 year update subscription, which I haven’t purchased as yet. Once I’ve marked all the false alerts on my drive to work, the GX65 is quiet and alerts to just true police radar. I’ve never driven with such a quiet detector. The unit comes with a very nice case and “Smart” power cord that works like a miniture control panel right on the dash. Highly reccommended!

First the detector – I recently bought from another retailer (see ’second’ point below). It is tremendous. Great functionality, options, design, gives good warning, the GPS tells you your speed when an alert goes off (so you only have to look at the detector to know what you’re dealing with and how fast you’re going). I primarily bought for the red light camera detection, but it turns out there are none in my area (when I traveled out of state, I found quite a bit), but if you don’t have many of the red light cameras in your area, you may want to save a few bucks and get the RX65 (also from Bell). It will save you a couple hundred bucks and (except for the GPS), it’s the same detector.

Second – I was looking to buy this detector and it was $469 everywhere. About 2-3 months ago, Amazon changed the price to $429 but said they didn’t have any in stock so they’d ship later. I put it in my cart. The price then dropped another $5 over the next few days, but I got caught up and didn’t finish the order. I went in a few days later and it was over $470. I wrote customer service who told me what the policy was but never answered the question about how something that’s not in stock can have a price change almost daily. Anyway, I didn’t order it. A few weeks later they moved the price to $425, so I ordered it. A week or two after that, they said that they wouldn’t be able to get it and they cancelled my order and took it down off the site for about 2 or 3 weeks. Now I see it’s back. It makes me wonder why my order was cancelled a few short weeks ago.

If you want my 2 cents, it’s selling for the same price on the Beltronics site (also with free shipping). Pick it up there and order a couple of accessories (visor clip, extra suction cups for another car, a USB plug which you’ll need to update the database, etc.) You’ll get more stuff (that you need anyway) bundled in with your free shipping.

Equus 3160 Reviews, Compare, Prices

Monday, November 23rd, 2009
Equus 3160

Product: Equus 3160

List Price: $459.44
Average customer review:

Amazon Price: Too low to display
Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see low price@CHAADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping Available

Compare Prices on Equus 3160


I was tired of the cheap OBD readers and wanted something much better. I also wanted something I could read the ABS system with. The Innova 3160 does the trick. It is easy to use and understand. I like the way it prompts you in order to get what you are looking for. It has an excellent screen with the exact information you need to make repairs. It is obvious that they consulted with a repair tech when they designed it. I haven’t tried to up-date it from the computer as yet, but it has all the necessary items and information with it to do so. On the down side, it doesn’t have an explanation for all the manufacturer codes, especially the ABS codes. I found that I am going to their web site quite often to get the expanation. The web-site is very good and helpful though. I really like it. The worst thing is the CHEAP carrying case. The unit won’t even fit into it with the cable attached. That means that you are always removing and replacing the cable. I’m sure that isn’t good on the connection. Throw the case away and buy something better that you can keep the scanner, instruction book, and other materials in. It’s hard to believe a company like this would offer such a fine instrument and provide it in this case. Never-the-less, it’s a great scanner and well worth the money-just figure a little extra for another case!

From the early 80’s on I have had scan tools.

Older ones you had to count the check engine light flashes to get the code number (still have mine for ford / gm / chrysler). I even went as low as to use a paper clip to get the codes.

Then I started with my first OBDII and it was very good (had to look the code description up in a book)

Now with the CAN OBDII and error code description on screen it is a must have for anyone.

This model with the ABS is a nice little touch also.

Even if you don’t repair the car yourself, knowing the code & description before going to a garage allows you to know what is wrong and if they are telling you the truth or not.

Leaving the gas cap off after a fill up and having the check engine light come on can cost over 70 bucks to get the car computer reset, only a few seconds to reset with this. (some newer cars / vans don’t automatically reset like the older models cars did)

Best of all, after you repair your car being able to use the OBDII tester to verify the repair is nice.

A would say a must have for beginner / hobbiest / professional.

it took a week of going to different sites and reading customer reviews plus time at manufactors home sites there were plenty of negative reviews on many models but on this unit the worst complaint was wanting a larger case. like any tool it takes practice learning how to use all the info available ,The ABS circuit is a plus I own a small used car dealer ship but it has already paid for it self in pointing out driveability issues other brands had reliability issues or customer service issues but so far it is a winner. the hardest part is sometimes finding the defective parts location under the hood I go to my local parts store and they have made use of service manuals for free ( chilton )I like buying from Amazon because of there willingness to work with you if you do have a problem

Troy DPH11 Best Price, Review, Compare

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009
Troy DPH11

Product: Troy DPH11

List Price: $399.99
Average customer review:

Amazon Price: Too low to display
Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see low price@CHAADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping Available

Compare Prices on Troy DPH11


I am a painting contractor, not a professional drywall installer. But I do maybe one or two small drywall jobs a year. Previously, I would have to spend $30/day to rent a lift. The local rental store near my place closed, so I was forced to look at purchasing a drywall lift. I once looked at picking one up a little while back, but they all ran about $700. Once I found this one on Amazon I couldn’t help but be skeptical. After reading the reviews and adding on the shipping costs, this turned out to be the lowest price out of them all so I took a chance and ordered it to finish the drywall ceiling in my kitchen.

The lift arrived on time, in a large cardboard box. One or two of the plastic bumpers were broke, but they are unimportant. I put them on and wrapped them with duct tape, and that corrected the problem.

So, the lift: It is built strong. The parts all move well, and everything I’ve seen so far is no less of quality then the $700 lifts out there. I love this thing. This will pay for itself after one week.

If you are afraid of picking up somehting flimsy, trust me, this is well worth the money.

Hi ho hi ho its off to work I go. What a great product. My father in law, George bought this unit for his house and one person can do all the sheetrock by himself. The only thing I didnt like was the shipping price.

Had seen product in other “catalogs” but at much higher price. Amazon’s price was outstanding. Shipping was significant due to weight, but total cost was still in the bargain category. Tool is great and is everything it promised to be. Is very well constructed but will break down into managable pieces that one person can handle. Have used it for 10′ ceilings and wall applications and it is a lifesaver. Overall, “a good buy.”

Uniden BC-246T Best Prices, Sales, Reviews, Compare

Saturday, November 21st, 2009
Uniden BC-246T

Product: Uniden BC-246T

List Price: $360.99
Average customer review:

Amazon Price: Too low to display
Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see low price@CHAADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping Available

Compare Prices on Uniden BC-246T

The bc246t is one of the most intelligently designed radios I have ever owned. It is compact, light, and equipped with a friendly keyboard. It is a technological leap forward in its features, including a large number of programming menus with keyboard hotkey alternatives. I cannot vouch for the many conventional scanning features, because I trunk scan exclusively, but they look good on paper. As for trunk scanning, this scanner does what I have missed in many other choices-it allows me to switch between talk groups by direct access rather than by frantic scanning until I hit the target talk group. The design of the bc246t is user-flexible: the non-techie can take advantage of the PC Control and cloning features to have the frequencies, talk groups, and alpha-tags (i.e. display name tags identifying the broadcast source) programmed into the radio for him or her; the old-school techies like me can grab a bottle of aspirin and do it all by hand. The small size of the bc246t requires a smaller speaker and a slight loss of sound quality which is acceptable in return for all the other advantages this unit offers. You can be lazy and like this radio, but if you put the work into learning how to run it, you’ll admire the thought that went into its design. Uniden includes a belt clip, wrist strap, PC cable, an AC adapter/charger and 2 AA batteries, and of course, a manual and frequency list. Demo software is available at Uniden’s website. Be sure to download the firmware update if nothing else.
Manual programming and manipulation of the menus is not difficult.
Display is easily readable.
The “extra” charge for a usable PC interface software is a way for uniden to squeeze an extra $30 from buyers. This was the ding to the rating. The Demo software is useless.
The dual battery (standard or rechargeable) & charger settings are convenient.

I think if you are looking for a scanner this is the one to have. I had a little difficulty with the instructions for the programming but i figured it out. I give it 5 stars still but the instructions could be a little more user friendly. Alot of fun with this toy. I think they fail to mention it does come with rechargable batteries. I am realy impresseed!!!

Sharx VIPcella-IR SCNC2607 Best Price, Reviews, Compare

Saturday, November 21st, 2009
Sharx VIPcella-IR SCNC2607

Product: Sharx VIPcella-IR SCNC2607

List Price: $399.95
Average customer review:

Amazon Price: Too low to display
Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see low price@CHAADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping Available

Compare Prices on Sharx VIPcella-IR SCNC2607

Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R3N1RIMM96O8CK Sharx Security VIPcella-IR SCNC2607 Wifi Wireless 802.11 g Cell Phone enabled IP Network Camera with built-in Web Server, Microphone, Infrared and Moonlight Color Night Vision
If you are like us and many new parents, you may have purchased an inside-the-house video baby monitor – such as the Summer. In this day in age, however, an even better solution is one that works both inside your house AND outside your house on your cell phone or at work!

This Sharx SCNC2607 is amazing and perfect for our baby cam. Great picture during the day and absolutely awesome images at night when there is no light in the baby’s room! This was exactly what I was looking for when looking at the more expensive solutions such as Axis, Sanyo, etc (which were going to cost me over $500!). I was concerned that the Sharx would be of lower quality but I’ve been very pleasantly surprised…

Here are some benefits we’ve found by having the Sharx SCNC2607:
1. When Daddy is at work, I can keep a small window of the baby’s room on my screen to see my little girl whenever I have a spare minute!

2. We have the camera setup as an icon on Mommy’s iPhone so she can easily click on the camera and view the baby’s crib. Whenever Mommy is away (and the Nanny, Grandparents, or Daddy is watching the baby) she can view into the room and see her little girl. Even inside the house we found that Mommy carries her iPhone around with her and its more convenient to have 1 consolidated device rather than also carrying around the Summer receiver.

3. We setup the Grandparents with an secure account to be able to look into the webcam and see their granddaughter anytime… We actually turned off the audio though to ensure we maintain some privacy in our conversations within the baby’s room :)

4. Screen size using the Sharx and the iPhone is 2x the Summer screen and has a much larger viewing angle.

So how hard is this to setup? I’d rate it on the moderately technical side. If you have any experience setting up a wireless network at home then it should be a breeze but you need to configure some things in your router. You’ll take the camera out of the box, plug it directly into the router, run their little IP Finder software, then go into the camera and setup passwords, user accounts, etc. On the router (I have a Linksys), you’ll need to go to the Applications & Gaming tab and setup Port Forwarding so you can securely tunnel into your home network to see the camera. Not difficult but I can see how someone with no experience may struggle a bit. Good news is that the camera comes with one of the best installation guide’s I’ve ever seen that walks you through it all and even gives you steps to setup your own URL (through DDNS).

There is one thing you should keep in mind when going with a webcam instead of an inside-the-house monitor – the webcam is a `passive’ device. Meaning you need to go to the webcam on your iPhone to see the camera. The inside-the-house versions that are `always on’ enables us to put the baby to bed and listen to the monitor when she wakes. You can enable audio on the webcam but you still need to have it up on the iPhone to hear it (and likely Mommy is doing Facebook, etc). If I were to do this over again, I would simply buy a cheaper audio-only inside-the-house monitor to hear when the baby wakes up and use the Sharx for the video whenever I want to see the baby. (Or I could go old school and just listen for the baby to cry but what type of a techno-daddy would I be then :) ?)

I’ll finish with the customer service I received by the guys at SecurCam. One word – fantastic. I first purchased the SCNC2602W. However, I didn’t realize that this camera didn’t work with my iPhone or non-Internet Explorer browsers. I contacted the folks at SecurCam and they explained the issue and very quickly helped me out by selling me the 2607 even before the product was officially launched! They’ve been awesome at responding to my technical issues, have a great online support setup, and flat-out great products. In the day in age where everyone is cutting back and outsourcing their support to overseas – these guys set a new standard in personalized support. I’d not only purchase additional cameras from them, but if they went into business on other items I would not hesitate to purchase them also. Keep up the great work guys!!!

I recently purchased the SCNC2607 IP-Cam to use as a video server that I could access from within my home on my PC’s and iPhones, as well as to access the video from anywhere outside my home LAN if I want.

Not requiring any special software to access this camera is the single most important item for me. If you want to be able to log into a camera from anywhere in the world, on any machine that has a connection to the internet and a web browser of some type, this is the one. There is also an included application called “Multi Live” which allows you to view up to 4 cams in one window.

The camera itself was pretty easy to set up, and the image quality is superb! No tricky setup decisions are necessary by the user to decide what type of streams are available to whoever logs into it from whatever platform. If you log into it on an iPhone through Safari, the iPhone negotiates with the camera server software and automatically appends the URL with the “/en/mjpgmain.asp” extension. If logged in from Internet Explorer, the basic URL automatically appends the “en/avmain.asp” extension. All you need to do is type the URL of the camera into your browser and the rest is taken care of automatically.

Safari on the iPhone will not process the audio stream, but this is not a problem with the camera, it is a limitation with Safari. I have read that Safari on a Mac computer will also not process the audio stream. I have tried various iPhone applications to process the audio stream, without success. But the designer of IP Vision by TTrix software has written me that an upcoming version will process audio. I have also tried this camera on a Sony PSP-3000 with the current firmware version (installed on 02-10-09) and current Flash update, but the device chokes up on memory limitations and can only process the jpeg still image. Some tablet PC’s and/or WiFi portable media players like the Nokia N810 or Archos 605 might work, but I haven’t tried them.

The default image quality settings don’t need to be tweaked to lower quality settings unless your upload bandwidth gets maxed out. For one login to the camera (over the internet from work) I was able to use the maximum quality settings and didn’t see or hear any problems. My connection at home is cable internet with about 128 Kilobyte upload and 5 Megabit download, so I was worried about upload speed. With 8 users logged on, there could be issues requiring some settings tweaks, but that’s more than most people are probably going to be worried about. If you connect within your LAN then you don’t need to be concerned with upload bandwidth, because the data isn’t passing through your modem.

There is a color setting, moonlight setting, and night vision setting, but I choose to let the camera do what it thinks it needs to do and have left these controls in automatic. The night vision works even in absolute darkness, and the image is crisp and clean. There is a setting for motion detection, with variable parameters to offset alarms or recording from occurrences like ceiling fans or a bird flying past a window.

When viewing the camera on your browser, you have some easy control buttons available to take snapshots in either .bmp or .jpg formats. You can also record to your hard drive, in the .asf format. Recording can be stopped and started with the “Record” button, or started with the button and stopped by a maximum file size input that anyone logged in can specify. These picture and video controls can be run by anyone you authorize in either the admin account or any user accounts you set up.

The user accounts (an account created that is not the admin account) has no access to your settings for the camera, so it’s a good one to send to Mom and Dad or your crazy aunt. When they get to the logon screen, if they choose “Enter” they can see what’s on your camera and record what they see and/or hear. If they try to enter “Settings” then they are presented with the login username/ password box again. As long as they don’t have your admin password, then you are safe from unauthorized changes to the camera settings.

For up to 8 concurrent logons, you don’t need to create 8 separate guest user accounts. One will suffice. I have logged onto one guest account through a browser on my PC over the internet, through my iPhone on WiFi over the internet, and also through another browser on the same PC but using the LAN IP address. That’s pretty cool to be able to log on over LAN or WAN while connected through the same router the camera is connecting to. Like if somebody chops up your internet cable connection with a ditch digger, you can still see the cam by using the LAN address.

The instruction manual supplied with the camera is very good. I only found one typo and it wasn’t important. It was not translated three times from an original language using obscure clucking noises and hieroglyphic symbols. An email to tech support was answered promptly and with great attention to detail. The techies are REAL ENGINEERS, not some morons in monkey suits with a license to confuse and aggravate.

I mentioned before that the camera “itself” was easy to set up. That is true. What might be a bit challenging for some is the router configuration. I suggest while waiting for the camera to be delivered, brush up on your router’s help files. Find the range of IP addresses your router is assigning to devices automatically, such as 192.168.1.25 through 192.168.1.125, because the IP address you choose to assign to the cam to make it a permanent host will be somewhere outside of that range. Also check to see if your router has the latest firmware. My Trendnet TEW-452BRP had a glitch with running DDNS updates, even if all the fields were input properly. This would have caused me great frustration had I not checked the website first.

If you want to access the cam from outside your LAN, then read up a little bit on DDNS. I’m using a free account from “no-ip.com” and there is a brief primer on using this service in the camera instruction manual. Check your router to see if it has an automatic function to update your current IP Address to a DDNS server. It doesn’t have to, as your PC can do it for you automatically every time it boots with a free program you get after registering, but why not be redundant if you can? If you decide to set up DDNS so as to access the cam through WAN, then find out how to give the cam TCP and UDP privileges on a specified port number, typically using a function called “Virtual Server.” Otherwise you would open “DMZ” or perhaps “Special AP” to give the cam connectivity rights.

Be warned that DMZ opens all ports, which might be dangerous. Special AP is for programs which require multiple connections that are blocked by NAT, so again that might be dangerous as well. Using Virtual Server only opens the ports necessary for functionality of this specific device, so it is the best way to punch that hole through the wall into the WWW. And remember, if you are restricting access to the router by use of MAC numbers, shut that off when first installing the cam or else you won’t get it to connect. Later you can turn it back on.

None of this is rocket science, but if problems do occur, the Engineers at Sharx are competent and they are committed to not letting you fail. It even says so in the instruction manual!

Bell’O AVSC2121 Reviews, Compare, Prices

Friday, November 20th, 2009
Bell'O AVSC2121

Product: Bell’O AVSC2121

List Price: $350.00
Average customer review:

Amazon Price: Too low to display
Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see low price@CHAADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping Available

Compare Prices on Bell’O AVSC2121

Item arrived with flimsy packaging considering the fragile glass included. The front trim piece had a few small scratches and defects/rough edges in the black powder coat finish. The top glass had a 3 inch chip defect of the right front corner that had clearly been “buffed” at the factory rather than discarding it as “defective”. The middle glass had scratches on the under surface black finish due to the 3 glasses sliding in transit. This is due to insufficient packing between the fragile glass pieces.
No problem getting a replacement unit sent out, other than back order delay.
The replacement unit also had scratches on the front trim but the powder coat was okay, and there were no glass flaws, so I “touched up” the finish flaws and assembled the new stand.
None of the reviews to this point have suggested a QC problem by the manufacturer. I believe the back orders caused a rush in production, or the manufacturer is using a new plant which has QC issues. No matter, because although the stand looks good and does its job, I can’t recommend it unless you have plenty of patience and have no alternate choices.

We found this on Amazon for about 2/3rds of the cost at a local big box electronics store. It had free shipping and was delivered quickly and in good condition. It set up easily and is good looking and sturdy. No complaints.
I got this stand a month ago, easy to assemble and looks great. It came in perfect condition, no complaints so far.