Review: Alpine Blackbird Portable Navigation System
Review: Alpine Blackbird Portable Navigation System
October 2006 By —Brett SolomonPowering up the unit for the first time, it took about four minutes to get a fix on the satellites and then bring up the appropriate map of my community. This procedure is typical for most portable nav units. In the front of the owner’s manual, a procedure is given to reboot the system using a tiny button and a paper clip as a tool. I thought this was rather odd to be in the front of the owner’s manual rather than buried in the back of the troubleshooting section. No problem—let’s forget about this minutia and hit the road! No sooner had I said that, I got as far as the end of my neighborhood and the Blackbird locked up. I mean it froze to the point where even the power switch would not shut the unit off.
Even though off to a rocky start, the unit performed well for day-to-day activities. Alpine’s robust Point-of-Interest database is among the most current in the world of navigation systems and can be the difference between finding the nearest location of your bank or one in a town 300 miles away. I also love the way the Alpine uses its brain when you input an address or a point-of-interest. By narrowing the search area down to the town level, the unit quickly narrows down search choices for streets so inputting your destination is not a hassle.

