04-21-2020, 05:02 PM
The easiest solution I have come up with, is to find a street that has Google Street view that you want to start riding on. Click on a specific location on the street to bring up the GPS coordinates.
For example these coordinates will put you on the Brooklyn Bridge, headed into Manhattan: 40.703577, -73.993567 (copy and past into Google maps if you want to see the exact point on the map).
Enter those coordinates into the headset for the start of your ride. for an "open ride" you can just enter those coordinates, skip the ending coordinates and start your ride.
If you want your ride to end at a certain location, you can specify the ending coordinates too. You can tell the headset to "avoid highways" so you don't just end up on the freeway while you are riding.
Protip: I've found it much easier to use the controller from my headset to enter the coordinates. Once you get used to coordinates, you may find that they are much easier to enter than an address. This is especially helpful, if you are like me and riding in countries like Japan or Russia, that do not use a Latin alphabet. If you see an interesting point on your ride, but are not sure what you are looking at...you can use the pause menu (compass), and on the pause menu, coordinates will flash on the bottom of the screen. Entering those coordinates on the Google maps app on your phone will let you see exactly where you are at.
For example these coordinates will put you on the Brooklyn Bridge, headed into Manhattan: 40.703577, -73.993567 (copy and past into Google maps if you want to see the exact point on the map).
Enter those coordinates into the headset for the start of your ride. for an "open ride" you can just enter those coordinates, skip the ending coordinates and start your ride.
If you want your ride to end at a certain location, you can specify the ending coordinates too. You can tell the headset to "avoid highways" so you don't just end up on the freeway while you are riding.
Protip: I've found it much easier to use the controller from my headset to enter the coordinates. Once you get used to coordinates, you may find that they are much easier to enter than an address. This is especially helpful, if you are like me and riding in countries like Japan or Russia, that do not use a Latin alphabet. If you see an interesting point on your ride, but are not sure what you are looking at...you can use the pause menu (compass), and on the pause menu, coordinates will flash on the bottom of the screen. Entering those coordinates on the Google maps app on your phone will let you see exactly where you are at.