That's a good tip on the California Vehicle Code prohibiting windshield mounted GPS units. I haven't been back to Southern California since I got mine here in North Idaho, so I'll have to remember to 'unmount' my Magellan Meridian Gold when we go visit the folks. It's not a vehicle specific model, just a good handheld unit that I can mount on the windshield or put in my pocket. I also have the lighter socket powercord for it. That sure is a battery saver. I basically bought it a few years ago for my work after we moved into the Sandpoint area. I found it a real blessing in my work as a Surveyor, finding my way around, learning the "new workplace" and ensuring that I was on the right property. I can get lats and longs off of maps in Maptech software (which has better topo maps than the Mapsend software that comes with the Magellan) and, if I am careful, I most always am under 50ft from where I find the particular section corner in question. If I can get within 100ft of anything I'm looking for, I can usually find it, so 50ft is terrific. I also use it to track myself into backroads and making sure I'm taking the right intersections, again ensuring that I'm actually in the right place. In the past 22 years of this career, I've found a bunch of this country isn't where we have been led to believe it is.
The Magellan Meridian Gold doesn't talk to me, but I have used it travelling to help me find places I've never been. Just plug in the address and away we go. List price was around $275 and it's long been discontinued. I rented a car in Denver that had a Magellan "onboard" and my wife really liked it because she didn't have to keep looking at the screen. It just talked to her. It let us know we missed our turns and 'recalculated' the route as we drove on. It did not handle new roads or roads that were newly cut-off by new highways, but, overall, we both thought it would be good to have when we 'get a new vehicle'.
Regards,
Sweetwater