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Posts: 3 | Thanked: 0 times | Joined on Feb 2008 @ Honolulu, Hi
#1
I mounted my n810 on the handle bar of my bike today. Has anyone tried this with great success or horrible destruction resulting? I'm kind of worried about vibrations...

I just used the car mount that came with the device, but added a rubber strip over the top to prevent it from bumping out. It seems pretty solid and I went on a test ride and it didnt fly out... The gps worked well at low speed, I got 3d fix. But when going down a curvy road at faster speeds it degraded to 2d fix and lost the connection a few times. I haven't used the gps in a car yet to compare.

Anyway this has lots of exciting possibilities! Like viewing tracks in google maps, and it could take photos of the rider periodically during a ride...

Ben



 
Posts: 26 | Thanked: 1 time | Joined on Aug 2007 @ Oxford, UK
#2
Hi,

I've been using my 770 with Maemo Mapper on my bike for nearly a year now, and covered ~2000miles. No ill effects so far. Recently upgraded to a Holux M1200 GPS which is much better than the old Garmin 'Brick' I had previously.

I got a clamp mount generic bracket on Ebay which works perfectly.

Cheers,

Alistair
__________________
Alistair.
Oxford, UK

Nokia 770 IT2006 running
from 2GB kingston MMC
64MB swap.
 
Posts: 156 | Thanked: 44 times | Joined on Dec 2007
#3
There are no moving parts in the storage, so you should be all good, provided that your SD card doesn't bump loose (which it shouldn't).
 
Posts: 5 | Thanked: 2 times | Joined on Jan 2009 @ NH, USA
#4
Thanks for posting the pictures. I did the same thing with $2 of parts from ACE Hardware. For any who are wondering about doing likewise, the main clamp is an electrical conduit clamp (not a water pipe mount). I used nylock nuts so that they wouldn't come loose with vibration, and a slice of "Foamies" foam around the handlebar tube to keep from scratching it and to cut vibration a little.
The mount is solid, although it does vibrate a bit. I'm not sure if I'd do this on a mountain bike or not. I probably would, just because having a GPS mounted on a bike is that cool.
My only real problem is that the mount covers the "lock screen" and "full screen" buttons. When I hit a good bump (pretty common on Oklahoma's roads ), it switches to fullscreen or back. Cutting a little bit of plastic would probably solve this.
 

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