Both the Garmin nuvi 780 GPS and the Verizon Venus cell phone found good deals on gas, though they pointed in opposite directions to find it.
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Published: June 20, 2008
Where oh where has that cheap gas gone?
How much would you pay to find out?
All three major cell phone companies are launching features that find local gas prices and give you turn-by-turn directions there: Verizon Wireless, Sprint and AT&T. Two major GPS device companies are into the game too: Garmin and TomTom.
I tested two new devices to see how well they work: The Garmin nuvi 780 GPS and the Verizon Venus cell phone. Both found good deals on gas, though they pointed in opposite directions to find it.
The Garmin system worked well, but showed some drawbacks right away. First, while the GPS features started up, the gas prices didn't. Garmin gets its gas prices through a MSN Direct service, and the nuvi flashed a warning that it would take "several hours" to receive. Several hours? And it only receives prices if plugged in to your car's power outlet, so you can't sit at your work desk and surf prices for the drive home.
I decided to wait a day to start testing.
The next morning, I drove to the intersection of Armenia and Martin Luther King Boulevard in Tampa, close to downtown, but not in it.
Some gas prices started to appear on the Garmin, but without the station names. It listed a dozen "Unknown" sites with prices next to each. The first was an unnamed site at Nebraska and Busch Boulevard, about 7 miles away, selling for $3.98 a gallon.
Along the way, I passed a Circle K station selling for gas for less, $3.95, and a few others near that price, but not listed on the Garmin. When I got to the "unknown" site, it was a Chevron selling for $3.95. Pretty close.
The Verizon phone, meanwhile, suggested a station miles away, at Hillsborough Avenue and Central Avenue for $3.85, which sounded too good to be true. It was.
Like most BP stations here, the advertised price is only for customers with cash or a BP credit card – which I think should be a felony. The Verizon phone quoted BP's bait-and-switch price, not the $4 at the pump for non-BP credit cards.
I started a second test right downtown on Ashley Boulevard.
The Garmin said to drive 2 miles to another "Unknown" station selling priced at $3.91. Along the way, I passed a Sonoco station selling for $3.89, then found the unknown station was a Costal station selling for $3.91.
Meanwhile, the Verizon phone said to go in the opposite direction from downtown. It suggested a Citgo station on Kennedy Boulevard at Bungalow Park, selling for $3.89. Bingo. It was $3.89, and I passed stations selling gas at $3.93 and $3.95. So I could have saved a few pennies right there.
Oddly, enough, both devices then suggested stations at the corner of Howard Avenue and Kennedy – a major spot for people zipping between South Tampa and I-275. That corner has always been expensive, but some stations have changed owners this year, and it's now closer to reality with pricing. Both devices noticed the prices at about $3.93.
Both devices had some good things and bad.
The Verizon phone is…well…a phone. Which means you always have it with you and don't have to lug around another gadget. It seems to work much faster than the GPS Garmin at finding prices. It can give turn-by-turn directions, but it has a much smaller screen.
Verizon sells a text list of gas prices through its GetItNow service for just $1.99 per month. But to get turn-by-turn directions, it costs $9.99 per month or $2.99 per day for the VZ Navigator service.
The Garmin GPS has a large, gorgeous touch screen. And it has the smooth operation of a device really meant for driving around. Our test model was the top-of-the-line nuvi 780, which costs a whopping $750 retail. (Amazon.com has prices more like $520.) The cheapest Garmin unit you can get that's MSN-compatible is the nüvi 205, which runs about $200, and the MSN receiver costs an additional $125.
Garmin officials say the "several" hour delay getting gas prices is a one-time thing to charge an internal battery in the cord, or when you travel out of town. If you keep the device plugged into your car, don't let the battery go dead, and stay close to home, you're OK.
Unlike GPS directions, which remain free once you buy the device, the gas prices are part of Garmin's deal with MSN Direct, and costs you $49.95 per year (about $4.16 monthly) or a one-time $129.95 charge.
The best feature of both gadgets is a comforting sense of well-being, knowing you're not getting totally ripped off. If the gadget says the best price is $3.95 and 5 miles away, you feel OK puling in a station next to you that's $3.95 too.
In Tampa, the gap between the cheapest and most expensive gas station is about 40 cents per gallon, according to Tampagasprices.com. That adds up to about $6 per fill-up for a 15-gallon tank, or $8 for a 20-gallon tank. Buying at the wrong place can add up to an extra $32 per month in a worst-case scenario.
If you already want features like real-time weather, movie times and other data stuff, the gas prices often come with it, so you're not paying more.
Reporter Richard Mullins can be reached at (813) 259-7919 or rmullins@tampatrib.com.
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