Software for creating custom GPS routesby Doug McPeek
Enter to win a TomTom Rider GPS!In the past I have relied on a varie-ty of mapping solutions to find roads and create routes for rides, but now I have a new favorite.
Google Maps, MapQuest, Bing Maps and Delorme Street Atlas were (and still are) easy to use computer-based tools that produced maps and printed directions that I could use to not only get to my destination but go the way I wanted.
I could also use the paper De-Lorme Atlas and Gazeteer to search in fine detail before going to the computerized tools.
But paper maps are becoming hard to find at MSTA events. Our routemeisters have embraced the GPS and the rides at our events are laid out in GPX files that can be loaded into many GPS units.
This scenic route to Rockbridge was created using Tyre to Travel. Each red flag is a waypoint that was placed by the user double-clicking the spot on the map. The software connected the flags automatically.A GPS unit offers the advantage of spoken turn-by-turn directions and easy rerouting when you need a detour or a short cut.
They have, however, been a mysterious and frustrating device for some motorcyclists to master.
Sure, you can input a destination in your GPS and press the GO but-ton, and the unit will calculate either the fastest or the shortest route. But it has no clue what the BEST route is, or the most scenic, curviest, etc... The GPS won’t take you the way you want to go, unless you learn to communicate with it.
Recently I found a program that creates routes as easily as the online tools and loads them onto my Garmin Nuvi 2595 as GPX files. It is called Tyre to Travel.
The thing I like about Tyre is that it is easy to use. I can search for a city, then remove the flag Tyre places on the map, zoom in or add it to the itinerary by clicking the correct choice.
Tyre to Travel 6.42 features:
Search, Click and Drag map
Drag and Drop to alter the route
Copy to Garmin or TomTom.
Save As .gpx and 13 other file formats
Familiar computer menus
Easy to use
The basic version is FREE! Up-graded pay versions available.
If I add it to the route, I am then presented with choices to rename it , skip it, calculate the route or book a nearby hotel.
My favorite features are those I have been using elsewhere for years. I can click, drag and drop the map to slide the view to an adjacent area; and click, drag and drop the line on the map to change the route to other roads. Each time I drag the route to a new road Tyre adds a Waypoint.
When I make a route it is dis-played as a list of Waypoints that I can rename. Tyre keeps them in the order I add-ed them until I move them up or down the list.
Tyre will also let me view my route with Google Earth or Google Maps.
This is the efficient and dull route to Rock-bridge that the GPS automatically chose. Yeah, it will get you there, but you won’t go the way you want to go unless you route itWhen it comes time to send the completed route to the GPS unit I simply click the Garmin tab on the toolbar and click “Copy to Garmin.” I just need my Garmin or its micro SD memory card connected to the computer.
There is one element of Tyre to Travel that could be bother-some and that is the need for an internet connection. The program cannot work without it. The user must either plan the whole trip in advance, or find WiFi internet access along the way to create new routes while away from home.
One more thing: the basic version is free, though there are ads on the right margin. Two upgraded pay versions are ad-free.
Overall I am very pleased with Tyre to Travel. It is effective and easy to use.
Enter to win a TomTom Rider GPS!