DH drives from Central NJ to our hosue in the Orlando area every month.
He has a GPS in his car.
He certainly doesn't need to for directions on his normal route, which at this point he can do in his sleep--I'm surprised he doesn't ahve nightmares about it--although he enjoys driving and I hate it.
Anyhow, here's where the GPS comes in handy...
He also has a CB radio. He doesn't talk to the drivers all that much, but he listens to them. When he hears that there is an accident or a slowdown ahead, he'll ask them what type of backup there is, and then take a look at the GPS to see if there's a suitable bypass on a county/local road to take. I'd say that 25% of the time he ends up cutting off of 95 to an alternate route to avoid getting stuck in a traffic nightmare.
He also uses it if he suddenly gets a craving for a specific type of food. Like he knows that there is a Taco Bell in one of the Richmond Hill, GA exits, but always messes up which one. He can locate the Taco Bell on the GPS and take the correct exit.
He makes the trip in one shot, by himself, and almost never stops for the night--although will leave that option open. Due to a ton of accidents and bad weather he stopped on his last drive down, the other drivers were getting crazier and crazier and he stopped at a Hampton for the night--got upgraded to a really nice suite based on his Hilton Honors status, walked across the parking lot to a Longhornz Steahouse, had a nice dinner and a couple fo beers, hit the hay by 8:00 pm, and got up and rolling at 6:00 am the next morning, which gave him a good five hours of drive time before the roads began to get a little congested.
Maryann, I hope this helped, and if you want his specific route to WDW, let me know. (We actually drove the route from Boston to home in Florida this past July) He's tried a lot of different routes over the past few years, and has determined through a lot of trial and error which works best. He can get from Central NJ to our house in Florida in as little as 16 hours, it's usually 17. He doens't drive more than a few mph pver the speed limit either--so that's not how he makes good time.
And a sobering story on why people shouldn't speed. My DH is an EMT. He's got national certification and is also licensed in the states of FL and NJ. A couple months ago he was driving down and a car went flying past him. A few miles down the road he caught up with that car who had lost control and left the road, ultimately crashing into a tree. DH stopped to render assistance. He pulled on his coveralls and grabbed his kit out of the trunk. He raced down into the median. I'm not going into it, but it was obvious that the passenger was deceased. The driver was unconcsious and obviously bleeding internally. The drivers seat had broken loose and was on top of the passenger, with the driver jammed in between the seat and the dash. Another good samaritan called 9-1-1 while DH crawled into the still running car (steering column was so mangled that they couldn't turn the key to turn it off, and hood was too mangled to lift.) DH used his hands to stabalize the drivers neck and keep her face of the extremely hot airbag that had deployed but not receded until the paramedics arrived. The "Golden Hour" was ticking and it was obvious that this woman had severe internal injuries and internal bleeding (again, I'll not go into how he knew this.) They had to cut her out of the car. Once he handed her off to the medics and gave his "witness statement" to the police, he left the scene. The police called him a couple of days later to clarify something, they told him the accident investigation concluded that the cause was "excessive speed."
Makes you think...
Anne