PanEuropean
Registered user
Hello Everyone:
This post is addressed to those who have SP 2610 or SP 2650 GPSR's with software 2.95 beta and who like to ride on twisty secondary roads, rather than the motorways.
The Garmin software engineers did a lot of work over the winter months in response to specific requests from touring motorcycle users to give us the ability to ask the GPS to keep us off motorways and off city streets, and keep us on the twisty secondary roads. I have not had any time to test this functionality since it was released in 2.95 public beta, in large part because my motorcycle is in Canada.
So, this is an appeal to you folks to help me out with the testing of this new software functionality. If we want Garmin to continue to be responsive to requests from the motorcycle community to provide software functions to enhance moto-riding, we need to put a little effort into trying out and testing what they do for us. They have made a number of changes to the SP software over the years specifically for moto riders - better discrimination of hairpin turns on alpine routes, adapting the software to the tighter turning radius of motos, giving us the 'avoid unpaved roads' function (for the tourers and sport-tourers), and now, giving us significant control over what road classes are used when the GPSR auto-routes us.
Here's the request: If you go to the ROUTE page on your SP 26xx running 2.95b or higher (by pressing and holding the MENU button), you will see a new icon labelled "ROUTING SETUP". If you press that button, you will be sent to the OPTIONS page, and you will notice a new tab there entitled "ROAD PREFERENCES". This tab is not visible if you access the options page in the normal way, that is to say by pressing the OPTIONS button.
Within that road preferences tab, you will see three sliding bars, labelled "major highways, minor highways, and city streets" or words to that effect.
What I would appreciate it if you would try, if your time and interest permit, is to slide the tabs for major highways and for city streets (the top and bottom sliders) to the very far right - the lowest possible preference setting - then slide the tab for minor highways to the far left, which is the highest possible preference setting.
Then choose a route between one place and another - say, a typical 100 mile "sunny Sunday" touring route - and see if the result you get is any more attractive, from a "twisties" point of view. than the result you would have got in the past. The reason I am asking for help from the group here is that everyone knows their own favourite ride in the country, what we are trying to do is see if this new software functionality will help us to pick better (more twisty) routes when we are in areas we are not familiar with. So, try generating some routes (only on the GPSR itself, not on the PC with MapSource) and see what you think of the results you get.
Please be aware that the GPSR can only discriminate between speed classes of roads, not between roads with different lane widths or roads with straight as opposed to twisty construction characteristics. So, it is possible that with the above settings, a controlled access motorway with a low speed limit would be chosen in preference to an awesome twisty country road with a higher speed limit. This is what we need to determine - is this algorithm (using speed classes to identify nice twisty country roads) a good algorithm or not? If it works, great, the engineers need to hear that. If it does not work, they need to hear where and why, so they can fine-tune it.
I would greatly appreciate it if you would post a summary of your results here on this thread, I will either collect all the info and send it to the software engineers, or refer them to this thread so they can look it over themselves.
We moto riders are enjoying unprecedented attention and co-operation from the Garmin software engineers now - this is something that some of us have been working very hard to accomplish for some years - so any help anyone can provide with testing this new capability will be greatly appreciated.
PanEuropean
This post is addressed to those who have SP 2610 or SP 2650 GPSR's with software 2.95 beta and who like to ride on twisty secondary roads, rather than the motorways.
The Garmin software engineers did a lot of work over the winter months in response to specific requests from touring motorcycle users to give us the ability to ask the GPS to keep us off motorways and off city streets, and keep us on the twisty secondary roads. I have not had any time to test this functionality since it was released in 2.95 public beta, in large part because my motorcycle is in Canada.
So, this is an appeal to you folks to help me out with the testing of this new software functionality. If we want Garmin to continue to be responsive to requests from the motorcycle community to provide software functions to enhance moto-riding, we need to put a little effort into trying out and testing what they do for us. They have made a number of changes to the SP software over the years specifically for moto riders - better discrimination of hairpin turns on alpine routes, adapting the software to the tighter turning radius of motos, giving us the 'avoid unpaved roads' function (for the tourers and sport-tourers), and now, giving us significant control over what road classes are used when the GPSR auto-routes us.
Here's the request: If you go to the ROUTE page on your SP 26xx running 2.95b or higher (by pressing and holding the MENU button), you will see a new icon labelled "ROUTING SETUP". If you press that button, you will be sent to the OPTIONS page, and you will notice a new tab there entitled "ROAD PREFERENCES". This tab is not visible if you access the options page in the normal way, that is to say by pressing the OPTIONS button.
Within that road preferences tab, you will see three sliding bars, labelled "major highways, minor highways, and city streets" or words to that effect.
What I would appreciate it if you would try, if your time and interest permit, is to slide the tabs for major highways and for city streets (the top and bottom sliders) to the very far right - the lowest possible preference setting - then slide the tab for minor highways to the far left, which is the highest possible preference setting.
Then choose a route between one place and another - say, a typical 100 mile "sunny Sunday" touring route - and see if the result you get is any more attractive, from a "twisties" point of view. than the result you would have got in the past. The reason I am asking for help from the group here is that everyone knows their own favourite ride in the country, what we are trying to do is see if this new software functionality will help us to pick better (more twisty) routes when we are in areas we are not familiar with. So, try generating some routes (only on the GPSR itself, not on the PC with MapSource) and see what you think of the results you get.
Please be aware that the GPSR can only discriminate between speed classes of roads, not between roads with different lane widths or roads with straight as opposed to twisty construction characteristics. So, it is possible that with the above settings, a controlled access motorway with a low speed limit would be chosen in preference to an awesome twisty country road with a higher speed limit. This is what we need to determine - is this algorithm (using speed classes to identify nice twisty country roads) a good algorithm or not? If it works, great, the engineers need to hear that. If it does not work, they need to hear where and why, so they can fine-tune it.
I would greatly appreciate it if you would post a summary of your results here on this thread, I will either collect all the info and send it to the software engineers, or refer them to this thread so they can look it over themselves.
We moto riders are enjoying unprecedented attention and co-operation from the Garmin software engineers now - this is something that some of us have been working very hard to accomplish for some years - so any help anyone can provide with testing this new capability will be greatly appreciated.
PanEuropean