Using touchscreens within the car would be this type of hassle, because although you set them in a splash or windshield mount where they’re safely to your line of sight, they still wiggle around too much. Or they did.
I drive my Land Cruiser worldwide creation . (Or at the least I’m trying.) And while it’s nice to have my phone handy on the road-or preferably off it-I exploit my phone too much to fish it out of my pocket on every occasion I must check a map or load more music. But if I’m taking place an icy pass or perhaps slowly slogging in the course of the mud, I don’t have time to dink around with a sissified phone mount. If it doesn’t stay put-or worse, falls off-I need to wait until I’m out of the tricky zones before I will put it all back together. Something tough please!
The RAM Mount has a suction cup, but that’s not novel. (Although it’s excellent.) It’s got a troublesome plastic snap-in case for the iPhone which feels maybe too tough. But the arm. The arm is made for business.
I’d heard of RAM Mounts for years but hadn’t ever tried one. But I’m so struck by this easy effectiveness of their iPhone 4 windshield mount that I’ll deign to capitalize their name, despite the fact that that drives me crazy unless I’m writing about LEGO.
If you go to the page for the iPhone mounts and you’ll see a great deal of different options: suction cups for car windows, sticker based ” Lil’ Buddy” units (which I’m not terribly impressed by, because…you’ll see), or clamp-on bike mounts. What you’re searching for is the arm-that brilliant, sturdy, reliable arm. The Lil’ Buddy has its own plastic, unmovable arm! No good.
It’s the arm that makes the RAM Mount so notable. It’s the first car mount I’ve ever used that has almost no give. Pressing the screen on my iPhone is awfully nearly as stable as if it were sitting flat on the skin of a desk. And due to the style the internal ball joints deform throughout the arm-smooshing into a locking oblong in place of simply compressing-while you tighten down the thick wingnut, the arm stays in position just where you would like it. It’s one of these successful design that RAM makes versions bigger than my arm that are used by the military to mount heavy equipment in their trucks.
There’s nothing at all that makes this praise exclusive to the iPhone mount, either. The arm is the idea of nearly their entire product line, which supports smartphones, GPS units, fishing rod holders, netbook mounts, etc. RAM is a corporation that just makes mounts. And they’re terribly good at it.
The suction cup isn’t too shabby either, although I did finally have it cease one frigid morning inside the desert north of Death Valley. I think the frost on the windows caused the rubber to shrink merely enough to lose some adhesion. I just applied the suction cup, gave the locking clasp a twist, and it stayed on in place for an additional thousand miles unperturbed-just as it had for a couple hundred miles before when crawling over rock ledges and skidding at ” floating speed” over washboard roads.
For the value-$25 or so, depending how you mix ‘n match parts-they’re hard to conquer. I will’t imagine using anything in my truck. Those simple, ingenious arms are the most efficient valuable aftermarket mounting system I’ve ever used.
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