Escort does it again.........

Man this is nice, but it raises three questions of concern:

1. How, or how well does it work with motorcycles?

2. Can the speed accuracy rival a GPS, or does it use GPS technology to calculate speed?

3. How much? $$$ (Probably the biggest of all questions)



Brian
 
3.  How much? $$$ (Probably the biggest of all questions)



                                        Brian
The G-Timer GT1 will sell for $149.95, and offers a complete set of performance screens. It has a 32-character backlit LCD display, and saves the most recent timed run in memory.

The G-Timer GT2 will sell for $249.95. It has an ultra bright blue vacuum fluorescent graphics display that adds additional options for displaying G-Meter information. It stores 10 runs in internal memory, and has the capability of downloading data to your laptop, Palm, or PC. It also includes a "remote control" power cord that lets you select modes and start timed runs without having to reach the buttons on the main unit.

fireskull.gif
 
Man this is nice, but it raises three questions of concern:

1.  How, or how well does it work with motorcycles?

2.  Can the speed accuracy rival a GPS, or does it use GPS technology to calculate speed?

3.  How much? $$$ (Probably the biggest of all questions)



                                        Brian
That is the line of thinking I took originally. You would have to start at a standstill for it to measure your speed. No GPS in there. It is an accelerommeter. Same thing as the G-Tech Pro. Anyone know of a GPS speedo?
 
One other question:  


 Can it do constant speed calculations?





                                   Brian
I don't think so. The basis is from a start to a stop, so if you back off it will throw it off. What I mean is ex: You start at 0mph and accelerate to 60mph, it will read just fine. If you slow to anything less than 0mph from that 60mph then it will not be accurate.
 
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