GEV can be a little challenging to get to -- my Garmin tried to lead me on a tour of the eastern seaboard until I looked at the city map I'd purchased at the PHL airport. GEV is located in an industrial park that used to be an airport, so the roads are a little challenging. Take I95 through Philadelphia then just before you cross into NJ, take the Bristol Pike exit. Head North on the Bristol Pike to Edgely Road, then NW to Curtis, then SW to Hartel.
When I picked it up a month later, I stopped at the Bristol Pike Walmart for travel supplies, then I drove though Philadelphis south on I95 to pick up my so at the PHL airport. I had planned on picking up the ambulance on Friday so son could fly in on Saturday, plus we'd have lower traffic through PHL.
I also picked up a Rand McNally trucker's road atlas and bought a new Rand McNally trucker's GPS for the trip back to MN. The Garmin was trashed. We found that the GPS and the truck's speedometer were within 1 MPH of each other.
Cruising speed for the return trip was about 65-70, including up the hill by the New River Gorge (Highway 64?). Mileage was about 12 or so -- we filled up at about every 250 miles.
Used ambulances often have worn out seat cushions - I bought a fancy urethane foam seat cushion from Amazon just for the trip, and it really made a difference. Future plans include a Bostrom FRED re-upholstery package (new foam, new fabric, same seat frame)
Remember, you have to stop at state truck scales, but with an empty truck and a vehicle-in-transit license tab, we never had any questions.
The good news, is that with all the toll roads, we actually found one road that didn't charge for ambulances. We told the attendant that we were not an ambulance, but she said we were, so no charge. We didn't argue. Plan on cash for the tollroads! It worked well for the co-driver to dig out the money for the driver, as well as watching road signs/etc.
Shawn McKitrick, GEV
Rand McNally GPS
Son at 70 MPH