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Sat nav study highlights reliance upon outdated route planners

Released on = June 26, 2007, 10:38 am

Press Release Author = Jimwatson

Industry = Real Estate

Press Release Summary = Approximately one in every hundred UK motorists are relying
on a map from the first half of the 20th century in order to get them to their
destinations, it has been revealed.

Press Release Body = Approximately one in every hundred UK motorists are relying on
a map from the first half of the 20th century in order to get them to their
destinations, it has been revealed.

According to research from automotive accessories provider Trafficmaster, 138,000
drivers are still using road maps that predate 1950 in spite of the fact that they
were published before the creation of the UK\'s first motorway.

Meanwhile, the study also indicates that 364,000 people are reliant upon road maps
that were drawn up before 1990, while five million people trust route planners that
were created before the turn of the millennium.

Commenting on the findings, Philip Hale, spokesman at Trafficmaster, has highlighted
the potential problems inherent in using older road maps.

\"We are all driving further than ever before and on regularly congested roads so, to
find the best route, you need to know all your options,\" he explained.

\"Outdated maps are at best unhelpful and at worst distracting and dangerous to follow.\"

To highlight the potential for confusion, the company has also compiled a list of
the major road improvements that have been created since 2000, which motorists
relying on elderly maps may be unaware of.

Among the projects that have recently been completed, motorists may be interested to
know that a new section of the M77 was built in Scotland in 2005, which replaced the
old A77.

Moreover, new junctions were added to the M25 in 2005, while the M6 toll road was
completed in 2003 in a bid to ease congestion around the West Midlands.

Drivers who would like to receive more up-to-date information about the UK\'s road
network may wish to consider buying a satellite navigation (sat nav) system.

Indeed, the Trafficmaster survey has revealed that 21 per cent of motorists now own
the route-finding devices, which offer more recent information than elderly road
maps.

Mr Hale has argued that it is important to be up to date with the latest transport
developments when planning a journey.

\"Road improvements and changes are happening all the time and you could just find
problems rather than your destination if you rely on an outdated map,\" he said.

\"You need to make sure you have the right tool for the job.\"

In related news, motorists who already own a sat nav device may be interested to
hear that police officers in the West Midlands have been clamping down on thieves
who target the items.

According to icCoventry, several dummy cars that have valuables such as sat navs on
show are being positioned in crime-ridden parts of Coventry over the coming weeks.

These vehicles are subjected to 24-hour surveillance, with police officers intending
to make arrests if any opportunist thieves are spotted trying to steal the items
within.


Web Site = http://www.assetz.co.uk/

Contact Details = Assetz House, Newby Road, Stockport, Cheshire, SK7 5DA, 0845 400
7000, linkexchangeseo@gmail.com

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