Panasonic cn-nvd905 Betriebsanweisung

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A navigation system marks a route to a destination or 
destinations on a map, guiding the user along the route 
to the destination.
Vehicle positioning system
  GPS (Global Positioning System)
The positioning system uses communications satellites 
launched by the US Department of Defense. Signals are 
received from three or more satellites orbiting at 21 000 
km altitude, and the principle of triangulation is used to 
fi nd the position.
By receiving GPS signals, this system can position the 
vehicle within a margin of error of 30 to 200 m.
Time before the current position is found
When this system is used for the fi rst time, or if it 
has not been used for an extended period, it may take 
as much as 5 minutes to fi nd the current position. In 
normal conditions, at a location with good reception, 
positioning takes around 2 minutes.
Starting to move the vehicle immediately after turning on 
the power causes it to take longer to fi nd the position, so 
the user is advised to remain parked in a location with 
good reception (with no buildings or trees to block the 
signals from GPS satellites) until the current position is 
found.
  Locations where GPS signal reception 
is diffi cult
Reception may not be possible in locations such as the 
following:
  In tunnels
   Between tall buildings
   Under elevated roads
  Between trees
  Map matching 
This function displays the vehicle position obtained from 
GPS, the gyro sensor and other sources on the map.
What is a navigation system?
Vehicle positioning precision
The vehicle mark position may not be displayed 
correctly due to the driving environment and the 
GPS satellite status.
Continue driving without taking further action, and the 
map matching function and GPS satellite data will be 
used to automatically correct the vehicle mark position.
   When a highway and an ordinary road are close 
together
   When driving through a fork junction with a narrow 
angle between roads
   When driving on roads in a block grid pattern
   After moving on a ferry, car transporter, etc.
   When driving on steep mountain roads
   When driving on winding roads
   When turning right or left after driving on a straight 
road for a long period
   When driving in a weaving motion on a wide road
The vehicle mark position may not be displayed correctly 
in the following additional situations:
   Between turning the ignition switch on (after turning 
the power on) and receiving GPS signals.
   When driving for the fi rst time after installing this 
system.
   After changing a tire, particularly when driving on an 
emergency tire.
   When driving on roads that are slippery due to snow, 
gravel etc., or when driving with tire chains.
   When the vehicle emerges onto a normal road after 
driving on a spiral route out of an underground or 
multi-story parking lot, or when the vehicle was turned 
on a turntable after stopping the engine (turning the 
power off).
   GPS satellites are under the control of the US 
Department of Defense, which may deliberately reduce 
positioning precision. In such situations, the vehicle 
mark not refl ect the actual position of the vehicle.
Route searching
The following situations do not indicate a 
malfunction:
   Some roads may be impassable, such as roads closed 
in winter or temporarily closed for pedestrian.
   When searching for a route through narrow streets, 
the route may include impassable footpaths or stairs.
   Some roads may be impassable, due to opening of a 
new road.
   Roads may be displayed which are not actually 
passable.
   The route may not change even when the search is 
repeated.
   The route may be congested.
   If there is no road or only very narrow roads to the 
destination, the route may only be displayed to a point 
some distance from the destination.
   Guidance may lead to an ordinary road under an 
elevated road. The reverse can also happen.
   A route may be displayed which makes a U-turn.
Route guidance
The following situations do not indicate a 
malfunction:
   Guidance may not be displayed even though a turn is 
required at an intersection. Guidance of the name of 
the intersection may not be provided.
   Guidance for left or right turns may not match the 
actual shape of the road.
   Voice guidance may be provided when the vehicle 
deviated from the guidance route, for example, turning 
before the guided intersection. 
   It may not be possible to display/provide audio 
direction guidance on some highways and toll roads.
   The Enlarged intersection map may not match the 
actual road shape.
   The guidance distances may be slightly inaccurate.
Road on the map 
data
Route trace derived from sensors
Actual path
Screen display
Point corrected by map matching
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