Belmit
29-12-2006, 19:59
Using pooled money I got for Christmas I bought myself one of these. I figured that as long as it doesn't get nicked I'm not going to need a new one for a long time so I might as well get the best one I can afford, with maps for Europe, the US and UK. Having tried Garmin and not got on with them very well, I tried my housemate's Tomtom One and found it really easy to use.
I've been up and down the country over the past few days visiting relatives in Swindon, Stockport and Sheffield and decided to trust it completely to take me where I needed to go. I must say I was impressed. Got from Swindon to Stockport in just over two and a half hours without incident, and upon seeing an alert that the M25 was congested on the way back, I simply told it to avoid that part of the journey and it sent me off at Silverstone and down to the A34 at Oxford.
Apart from the obvious features I was really pleased with some of the extra ones as well. After turning Bluetooth on on my phone and plugging a small microphone into the unit it gave me an instant hands-free service. It copies all your contacts into the sat-nav and you can use it to make and take calls all with the phone in your pocket. You can even dial numbers using the touchscreen. Most impressive was when my brother sent me a text and it suddenly said "Incoming message from Rich" then proceeded to read it out! I also downloaded some audiobooks to the unit to listen to on the journey - it really does do everything.
One of the nicest perks from buying the ubermodel though is that if you set it to use the computerised voice it will actually read out the road and place names so "take the second exit at the roundabout, then turn left" becomes "take the second exit at the roundabout, A34 to Newbury, then turn left, Basingstoke Road". Very handy in towns where you have a lot of turns coming up and you're not sure which left or right it is.
My only gripe was that the speed camera database was a bit hit and miss. It saved me a couple of times, but it doesn't seem to differentiate between which side of the road it's on, and occasionally gets the speed limit for the road wrong. One time it alerted me and there was no camera. Still, it's a great bonus feature and I'm sure with the latest updated databases it'll get better as time goes on.
If anyone was thinking of getting a sat-nav unit any time soon, I wouldn't hesitate to recommend one of these.
I've been up and down the country over the past few days visiting relatives in Swindon, Stockport and Sheffield and decided to trust it completely to take me where I needed to go. I must say I was impressed. Got from Swindon to Stockport in just over two and a half hours without incident, and upon seeing an alert that the M25 was congested on the way back, I simply told it to avoid that part of the journey and it sent me off at Silverstone and down to the A34 at Oxford.
Apart from the obvious features I was really pleased with some of the extra ones as well. After turning Bluetooth on on my phone and plugging a small microphone into the unit it gave me an instant hands-free service. It copies all your contacts into the sat-nav and you can use it to make and take calls all with the phone in your pocket. You can even dial numbers using the touchscreen. Most impressive was when my brother sent me a text and it suddenly said "Incoming message from Rich" then proceeded to read it out! I also downloaded some audiobooks to the unit to listen to on the journey - it really does do everything.
One of the nicest perks from buying the ubermodel though is that if you set it to use the computerised voice it will actually read out the road and place names so "take the second exit at the roundabout, then turn left" becomes "take the second exit at the roundabout, A34 to Newbury, then turn left, Basingstoke Road". Very handy in towns where you have a lot of turns coming up and you're not sure which left or right it is.
My only gripe was that the speed camera database was a bit hit and miss. It saved me a couple of times, but it doesn't seem to differentiate between which side of the road it's on, and occasionally gets the speed limit for the road wrong. One time it alerted me and there was no camera. Still, it's a great bonus feature and I'm sure with the latest updated databases it'll get better as time goes on.
If anyone was thinking of getting a sat-nav unit any time soon, I wouldn't hesitate to recommend one of these.