I bought a new SPOT GPS location transmitter and it was delivered this week. This orange GPS transmitter cost $149.95 including 2nd day air. It's a rugged little unit about the size and heft of a radar detector, is waterproof (10 feet for 30 minutes), and runs on lithium AA batteries.
Besides the unit you also have to subscribe to a $100/year service to provide basic SPOTchecking, but I opted for the additional $50/year "SPOTcasting" feature that can update your location automatically every 10 minutes if I turn it on. I also paid an extra $7 for some insurance in case of having to be hauled out of somewhere by a helicopter....but that's a story for another day.
The unit appears extremely simple and straight-forward with just a few buttons and a nice water tight compartment in back for the batteries. The instruction manual is a bit repetitive and the blinky lights are not quite intuitive as I would have guessed. I'm sure I'll pick it up, but understanding green blinky lights on a 3 second interval vs. a solid green and blink one next to it--then some red solid lights. Combine that with not being able to see the web page of what was reported until 15 minutes later and it will take me a few days to understand the personality of my new little orange friend.
Tracking Service
Once you pay for the service by credit card, enter the unit's serial number, and other data--you then get to go to a website and configure a variety of things: who to contact if you press and hold the Help button, what to tell the the 911 folks if you press it and who they should contact after a get-off, who gets to see what (think "Mom" since one of the reasons I bought it was for her to worry less). And you also have choices of who to notify via e-mail or SMS. I set the help one up to say, "Ummm...I pressed Help. You probably shouldn't panic, but should watch to see if I move or press the 911 button."
Also on the back-end is the option to set up a Google powered map for the public to see...or if you want to protect it and give it to only a few people.
The Public View
You wanna see the map? Clicky here. No password at present and it shows where I've been in the last 24 hours. That time period isn't changable....and is a fairly new service so I'm hoping they'll add some granularity to those controls and maybe make it a bit easier for multi-day rally coverage. I may have to schmooze their tech. staff to see.
Bottom Line
The bottom line with this thing is that I think it's a cost-effective option if you want to be tracked. It's cheaper, smaller, and easier to use than Star-Traxx I think. Although I think the service costs a bit more it does also transmit position every 10 minutes vs. an hour on the ST unit.
The service isn't bad, but I hope they work on the interface and views to the public a bit more..or allow us to mash up our own Google Maps.
For $307 I'm good to go for a year.
More reports to follow I'm sure including upcoming rides on May 24 (S&M 1000), May 31 (Word!), June 28 (Utah 1088), and August (SPANK/IB National).
Besides the unit you also have to subscribe to a $100/year service to provide basic SPOTchecking, but I opted for the additional $50/year "SPOTcasting" feature that can update your location automatically every 10 minutes if I turn it on. I also paid an extra $7 for some insurance in case of having to be hauled out of somewhere by a helicopter....but that's a story for another day.
The unit appears extremely simple and straight-forward with just a few buttons and a nice water tight compartment in back for the batteries. The instruction manual is a bit repetitive and the blinky lights are not quite intuitive as I would have guessed. I'm sure I'll pick it up, but understanding green blinky lights on a 3 second interval vs. a solid green and blink one next to it--then some red solid lights. Combine that with not being able to see the web page of what was reported until 15 minutes later and it will take me a few days to understand the personality of my new little orange friend.
Tracking Service
Once you pay for the service by credit card, enter the unit's serial number, and other data--you then get to go to a website and configure a variety of things: who to contact if you press and hold the Help button, what to tell the the 911 folks if you press it and who they should contact after a get-off, who gets to see what (think "Mom" since one of the reasons I bought it was for her to worry less). And you also have choices of who to notify via e-mail or SMS. I set the help one up to say, "Ummm...I pressed Help. You probably shouldn't panic, but should watch to see if I move or press the 911 button."
Also on the back-end is the option to set up a Google powered map for the public to see...or if you want to protect it and give it to only a few people.
The Public View
You wanna see the map? Clicky here. No password at present and it shows where I've been in the last 24 hours. That time period isn't changable....and is a fairly new service so I'm hoping they'll add some granularity to those controls and maybe make it a bit easier for multi-day rally coverage. I may have to schmooze their tech. staff to see.
Bottom Line
The bottom line with this thing is that I think it's a cost-effective option if you want to be tracked. It's cheaper, smaller, and easier to use than Star-Traxx I think. Although I think the service costs a bit more it does also transmit position every 10 minutes vs. an hour on the ST unit.
The service isn't bad, but I hope they work on the interface and views to the public a bit more..or allow us to mash up our own Google Maps.
For $307 I'm good to go for a year.
More reports to follow I'm sure including upcoming rides on May 24 (S&M 1000), May 31 (Word!), June 28 (Utah 1088), and August (SPANK/IB National).
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