See The 10 Best Car Tablet Mounts on Ezvid Wiki ►►
Fact #1. According to the National Safety Council, approximately 1.6 million accidents occur each year due to drivers distracted by cell phones. As a result, a lot of drivers understandably prefer to use tablets in the car in place of their cell phones. Tablets provide a much larger interface for music and navigation. They also make texting so inconvenient as to keep the driver from bothering with it.
Fact #2. The big problem with tablets, though, is their bigness. They're incredibly difficult to manipulate with one hand. This makes driving with a tablet a lot more dangerous than driving with a phone. Unless, of course, you have a good mount for your tablet.
Fact #3. Car tablet mounts are designed to work with a variety of tablet sizes. They have spring-loaded holsters, which hook into place by means of suction or leverage. The result is a large, well-placed interactive system for your vehicle that should help keep you safe from yourself.
Fact #4. Leverage-based tablet mounts use either the slots of your air vents as mounting points, or the stems of your head rest to face the tablet toward the back seat. Presumably, there are children back there whom you aim to distract for the duration of the ride. While these provide you with a lot of placement options, they can add unhealthy amounts of weight to the simple plastic vents, possibly enough to break them. They also have a greater tendency to slip out of place from the natural vibrations of the car.
Fact #5. Suction-based mounts provide better security against slippage. However, they limit your mounting positions to the front of the car. What's more, if you have an intensely sloping windshield like the ones you can find on late model Honda Civics, your mounting angles are significantly reduced.
Fact #1. According to the National Safety Council, approximately 1.6 million accidents occur each year due to drivers distracted by cell phones. As a result, a lot of drivers understandably prefer to use tablets in the car in place of their cell phones. Tablets provide a much larger interface for music and navigation. They also make texting so inconvenient as to keep the driver from bothering with it.
Fact #2. The big problem with tablets, though, is their bigness. They're incredibly difficult to manipulate with one hand. This makes driving with a tablet a lot more dangerous than driving with a phone. Unless, of course, you have a good mount for your tablet.
Fact #3. Car tablet mounts are designed to work with a variety of tablet sizes. They have spring-loaded holsters, which hook into place by means of suction or leverage. The result is a large, well-placed interactive system for your vehicle that should help keep you safe from yourself.
Fact #4. Leverage-based tablet mounts use either the slots of your air vents as mounting points, or the stems of your head rest to face the tablet toward the back seat. Presumably, there are children back there whom you aim to distract for the duration of the ride. While these provide you with a lot of placement options, they can add unhealthy amounts of weight to the simple plastic vents, possibly enough to break them. They also have a greater tendency to slip out of place from the natural vibrations of the car.
Fact #5. Suction-based mounts provide better security against slippage. However, they limit your mounting positions to the front of the car. What's more, if you have an intensely sloping windshield like the ones you can find on late model Honda Civics, your mounting angles are significantly reduced.
- Category
- Hardware
Sign in or sign up to post comments.
Be the first to comment