Left Coast Geek
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Do the sync3 maps on a 2019 cover Mexico ?
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Download the area into the Google maps app. You should have coverage then.Because cellular data is very spotty in rural Mexico...

Have you ever taken that route before? Some of the areas are known to be dangerous. Be prepared. With that said, Samsung phones have GPS chips built in, unless extremely old. So a third party GPS that supports GPS will help.problem is, i'm spending 4 months with a RV caravan traveling all over mexico. I don't think I can download the whole country. and downloaded map sections can expire when you least expect them to. I've gotten burned before where I thought I had map sections all downloaded just to have them not available when I was off grid.
this isn't the exact route, but its close to a bunch of it.
View attachment 78732
I'm in the business and can tell you there are many ways to navigate offline. Example from Google maps "Google Maps can be used without the need to connect to the internet." My phones work just fine without internet or cloud access. You just have to know what GPS app to use and what offline map best suits your needs. Regarding a 2019 Expedition, since NA 2 21 is the current version of maps, the maps could possibly be outdated. I find this a lot in my 2019 Platinum, where new roads, highways, exits, etc. are missing.Traveling with a caravan who does this every year, wagon master in front, Green Angel tow truck as a sag wagon.
My phone has a GPS chip, so does the Expedition... GPS just gives you your precise latitude and longitude... you need mapping software to make that useful. Google maps depend on the cloud, require any Internet connection to fetch sections... the Ford maps are stored in the vehicles nav computer and work without Internet access
well, I just bought the nav upgrade from Ford, downloaded the current maps, stuck the stuff on a USB stick and upgraded the system with it... restart car, zoom out til I see most of California, drag down to the west coast of Mexico, zoom in and find Mazatlán, keep zooming in, wow, all the boulevards, zoom in some more, and fine grids of city streets. tried same thing on Merida near Yucatan, and boom yeah, right down to the city street level.
says I just got NA 2 22
somehow I'm not expecting a lot of road changes in the rural parts of Mexico the caravan I'm joining will be exploring.
You should make a trip thread!as it turns out, most of the campsites DID have wifi internet available, and/or a fellow RV traveler let me use his Starlink, so I was able to download offline maps for the next few days travel into my phone's Google Maps, and this worked quite well. The journey was a total of 9960 miles from home to home (but this included almost 2000 miles to the initial border crossing in McAllen, Texas, then about 1000 miles home from Nogales,AZ with a detour to my wife's cousin in Orange County.
I agree! Sounds like a very interesting trip!You should make a trip thread!
I agree! Sounds like a very interesting trip!