Portable sat-navs and smartphone apps may be dropping in price, but they’re still beyond the budget of many motorists, who prefer a road atlas.
These simple maps are great for route planning at home, and now have many features normally found on sat-navs, such as fuel stations, speed limits and safety cameras. We rounded up 12 of the latest 2012 editions, in all shapes and sizes, to pick the best to keep in your car.
Our road atlases vary in size, but scale is important. The lower the miles per inch (mpi) figure, the clearer the maps. We also wanted clear junction diagrams – on the main pages, as well as the close-up town maps. A page-by-page map index scored points, while quality was vital, as atlases have a hard life. Price was our final factor.
Our preferred atlas size was A4 – not too big, but not too small – and spiralbounds are easier to use than perfect-bounds. The A-Z Great Britain Road Atlas took the win with its detailed junctions, clear routing and top-quality pages. Second was the Michelin Great Britain – a good-quality, well priced perfect-bound, packed with info. A-Z’s A3 SuperScale map finished third, with its Northern Ireland mapping.
A-Z Spiral Binding
Great maps from A-Z but the spiral binding is very poor. Produces a bulky spine to the book and the soft covers rapidly get torn off when putting the atlas back in my seat pocket. The earlier editions with a proper book binding is slim and far superior but unfortunately no longer available. Come on A-Z what about a new properly bound edition of this very good Atlas.
By Everyman on 4 November, 2011, 4:55pm