Showing posts with label Sat Nav. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sat Nav. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 January 2015

Is Tour Route Planning As Good As The Real Thing?


So the motorbikes are put away, and many of us are sitting here in the depths of winter.  In some places it is cold outside and in others it is very wet.  People from more southerly areas are still able to ride, but for most, winter is a time for staying off the bike.

So, what to do?  If we cannot ride, we need to fill our time with doing other things.  Some fettle their bikes, some find other things to do inside.  I like to plan next summers bike trips and I am just coming to the end of that right now.

Maps are covering the floor and my desk.....



My laptop is on overload with routes.  Choosing the best roads to fit together into one great tour is the key....


But, the best thing is, I really enjoy doing this as it increases the excitement level and makes me feel that the tour is nearer.  So, for me, route planning really is nearly as good as actually riding the routes later.

Gary
www.tour1.co.uk

Saturday, 2 July 2011

Garmin Zumo 660 Motorcycle GPS / Sat Nav Review


I bought my Garmin Zumo 660 eighteen months ago and after riding with it for 21,000 miles on my tour of the USA and using it extensively across Europe on tours in France, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia and Spain, I feel it is time I presented my thoughts on how well it performs.

Overall, some aspects of the Zumo are really good and beat the competition hands down, but sadly in other areas, it is simply dreadful. It is a real shame that what could be a fantastic device is ruined by some aspects that should be a lot better than they actually are.

I have looked at and evaluated the Garmin Zumo 660 in ten key areas and given my brief thoughts on each area below. I have scored the performance of the Zumo out of five, with the scoring system being as follows.

1 = Unacceptable
2 = Poor
3 = Reasonable
4 = Good
5 = Excellent


Looks / quality / feel. Points awarded = 5. When you first open the box and pick up the unit, it looks and feels just how it should. The build quality looks very good and the unit looks superb.

User manual. Points awarded = 1. When I first received the Zumo I briefly wrote about my first impressions of it on this blog. I wrote that there was no manual in the box. Finding it online was very difficult and needing a copy, I eventually found one and had to print one myself on my home printer. This was not a great start to my Garmin experience.

Mounting the device. Points awarded = 5. This was very easy and the mounts look good. After thousands of miles using the unit, the mount has worked superbly.

Loading the mapping software. Points awarded = 1. One of the really great things about the Garmin Zumo 660 is the ability to do your route planning on a computer and then transfer those routes to the unit. Being able to do this planning on a computer rather than on the unit itself is a huge benefit, if like me, your trips are long and complex with many places you want to stop and see. However, getting to the point where you can do this is an absolute nightmare. In order to prevent copying of the maps from computer to computer and unit to unit, they have locking codes. Unlocking the maps by entering these codes should be straightforward, but it turned out to be one of the most complex things I think I have ever had to do with any software, ever. Due to the lack of any clear instructions on how to unlock the maps, I had to call Garmin Support twice before I could even get the maps to work. This is completely unacceptable and very nearly caused me to abandon the Zumo before I had even used it once.

Route planning on a PC. Points awarded = 3. The fact that route planning can be done on a computer is perhaps the best feature about this GPS / Sat Nav. For my 21,000 ride in the USA, having to do the route planning on the unit itself would have been a nightmare and this is where Garmin have the competition beaten hands down. This in itself is probably the best reason to use a Garmin Zumo. You can use just about any GPS / Sat Nav for simple journeys where there is a single destination, but for anything more complex, you need something different where route planning on a PC is possible and the Zumo is great for this. However, I have only awarded 3 points for this and that is because the software itself, called Mapsource, is distinctly average. It is clunky to use, not at all intuitive and I am surprised that Garmin still supply it. Compared with modern, well developed software, Mapsource seems out-of-date and not at all user friendly.

Device route calculation. Points awarded = 4.5. In most circumstances, the route calculation the unit carries out seems to be very good. Okay, the unit does take a long time to find the satellites when first turned on, but that is just a little frustration compared to how well the calculation seems to happen.  The calcuation is fast too, including both working out the route when first entered and recalculation if you take a different road to the one the unit expects you to. My only slight reservation is when in the USA and riding with my friend Paul, we had identical units, with identical map software loaded (the exact same version) and identical custom routes planned, but the two units calculated different routes. We never got to the bottom of this, but it did seem very odd.

Use while riding. Points awarded = 5. I cannot fault the operation of the unit in any way. The screen is bright and clear.  Use even when wearing riding gloves in excellent and the options and features all worked fantastically well.

Reliability. Points awarded = 3. Almost all of the time I have used a Zumo, the reliability has been fantastic. However, occasionally, the unit will turn off for no reason. Most of the time this isn’t a problem, but on two occasions, I couldn’t turn it back on. One of these times, the problem was solved by removing and replacing the battery, but the other time was much worse, needing a telephone call to Garmin support to fix the problem, plus my laptop to download a fix. If I hadn’t had my laptop with me, the problem could not have been fixed. This turning off problem seems to have gone away, presumably solved by one of the software upgrades I have done with Garmin support (Garmin have to talk you through these, they don’t happen automatically).

Value for money. Points awarded = 2. The Zumo isn’t cheap, but there is a much worse roblem that means you may end up spending much more money than you need to because of Garmin’s policies. This has happened to me twice now. When you buy a new Zumo you get the maps for the country you are in on a disc. If you buy it in the USA, you get the North America Maps and if you but it in the UK, you get the European maps. However, if you buy additional maps (like I have) there are three ways of doing this and two of them will lead to problems if you want to plan your routes on a computer. DO NOT BUT NEW MAPS BY DOWNLAODING THEM AND DO NOT BUY THEM ON A DATA CARD, because with either route, you cannot use those maps for route planning and you will have to buy exactly the same maps again in order to be able to use them in the Mapsource software. ONLY buy them on a disc! Shockingly, Garmin do not make this clear and when you telephone them to complain, they say it is your problem and you bought the maps on the wrong media.

The CD version of the maps can be used for both the route planning and it can be transferred to your unit, but by downloading or buying the maps on an SD card, you can only use the maps in the unit itself. This is dreadful bad practice and Garmin should hang their heads in shame due to it. There is another reason why I have awarded only 2 points in this category and this relates to me needing to replace my Garmin unit. I failed to properly fix my unit in its mount and the unit fell of my bike at 70mph and was smashed in the process. This was totally my fault, but what happened next also appalled me. I purchased a new unit and tried to use my existing maps in my new unit, only to be told by Garmin this is not possible. They fix the use of the maps to a particular unit and even in my case, where my unit was broken, I could not transfer my existing maps to the new unit. I therefore have perfectly usable maps that are registered to my Garmin account that I cannot use. This is nothing short of a rip off and again Garmin should hang their heads in shame. My view is, don’t expect to be treated fairly by Garmin as this will not happen.

Customer service. Points awarded = 2. I have mixed views about the Garmin customer service. They have a call centre in the UK and if you have a problem, don’t even bother trying to call them as all of the times I have tried it, I found them to be totally useless and on a number of occasions, I knew more about their product than they did.  On another occasion, they simply referred me back to the Garmin website to get the help they couldn’t provide. However, Garmin customer support in the USA is much, much better and I have always had a really good experience when I telephone them. I now am happy to pay for an international telephone call from Europe to the USA because they are so much better.

That was until recently, when I ran across another of Garmin’s policies regarding maps. It is a complex issue, but essentially Garmin told me to buy new maps to replace the ones I couldn’t use when I broke my existing unit when it fell from the bike. Having been burned by Garmin before, I specifically asked how I should buy a new European map so that I could use it both for route planning and on my new unit. They told me to download the maps and I did so, only to find I could use these only on the unit and not on my laptop for route planning. After a huge amount of argument, they accepted they were wrong and said they would send the maps in the correct format (on a CD) but they would only post to an address in the USA and they don’t have the capability to send a package to Europe!!! I provided them with a USA address form where the CD could be forwarded, but the CD never arrived and despite trying to contact Garmin a few times by e-mail, they are not responding. The Garmin customer service therefore ranges from excellent at times, to appalling. Sadly it is most often appalling.

Conclusion. Overall points awarded = 3. The average score from all of the categories above is just 3 points. Despite having a potentially fantastic product, my overall experience of the Garmin Zumo 660 is no better than reasonable. For the long trips I often make on my motorbike, the Zumo is still the best product I have found, but I use it reluctantly and will swop to another manufacturer as soon as something better comes along. Or Garmin coud just fix the many problems they have and change into a really great organisation.  Garmin really must do better.

Tuesday, 26 January 2010

Sat Nav Bad. Sat Nav Good.

Way back in 1979, the Boomtown Rats recorded a song called “I don’t like Mondays”. I would like to extend that to “I don’t like Januarys”. It is still depressingly cold here. And wet. The sort of wet that gets right through to your bones. What are you meant to do if getting on your motorbike means becoming wetter than a fish taking a bath and colder than one of Ben and Jerry’s specials?

Clean the bike? Done that.

Take the dog for a walk? Done that – got wet.

Buy a wake board? Done that, but it is too cold to use it.

OK, so a week ago I thought I needed something new to look at. You might have read my post back in December hinting to my dearly beloved that I might need a new Sat Nav for Christmas for my tour of the USA. Well, it worked :) and I sat there on Christmas day surrounded by discarded wrapping paper and with a big smile on my face, holding a box marked Garmin Zumo.

About a week ago, having seen it was raining AGAIN, I opened the box to give it a try. My initial impressions after a couple of hours were “why did I bother - this is a pile of poo”.

However having got over the teething troubles, I soon realised this was just what I needed. The next few days showed to me this would be very good indeed.

OK, before telling you, dear reader, why I like the Garmin so much, here is the scoop on the teething troubles. I opened the box to see there is no manual, which is strange, so I checked the packing list. Guess what? There isn’t meant to be a manual packed in the box! You have to go online to get one. Now, don’t get me wrong, I am all for saving the planet and not printing stuff unnecessarily (like in 6 languages) but this is pretty silly. They don’t tell you where to find the manual online, you just have to go find it for yourself, then if you are like me and do want a paper copy, you have to print it out yourself. Not a great start.

One of the things that attracted me to the Garmin was the ability to plot routes on your computer in detail and then transfer them to the Sat Nav unit. This means having to load the mapping software onto your computer. OK so far – loading it was a piece of cake. Then you have to unlock the maps. Garmin please listen to this – it was a TOTAL NIGHTMARE to do this. Two calls to their support department (actually very helpful) soon sorted this though, but why make it so difficult in the first place? I understand the need to do this, but why make it so that only people at Garmin can understand how to do this? Dumb, vey dumb.

The next thing to go wrong was in addition to the maps (Europe) that came on the CD in the box, my wife purchased one of the map sets (the USA) on a memory card that you place into the Sat Nav unit, which I did. However, there is no way to transfer those maps back to your computer to make the route planning easier. OK, so I need to exchange this memory card for a CD, so I contacted Amazon which is where my wife purchased the memory card. What came next was a bummer – to prevent people copying software, Amazon and their suppliers do not take back software, so even though I couldn’t copy it, I had to buy the same USA maps on a CD! I now have all of the USA maps twice. Not happy.

So, this all took a few days to resolve and of course when the new CD arrived I had to go through the stupid un-locking process again. Arrrrggghhhhh!

Anyway, now to the good stuff. Planning a route on your computer is so much better than doing it on a sat nav unit. It is so easy – you can see a proper map and enter waypoints with the click of your mouse, join them up to form a route and save them. So easy! This turned me back into a happy little boy. You can even then view your map in Google Earth to see what other highlights there are along your route that you might want to stop and see. I don’t want to sound too gushy over this, but having used this for the past few days, I am a convert. The TomTom system I have is now consigned to a cupboard and the Garmin will rule supreme I am sure.

Having planned a few test routes I went out and tried them on the road. Ok, it was in my car because it was STILL RAINING, but I am sure you will forgive me for that. The unit performed very well on the road – up to the high standard of the TomTom. The Garmin Zumo has a bigger screen, but a comparison of the two sat navs shows them to be about the same on the road.

I have yet to try the Garmin on a motorbike, but I am pretty sure it will be as good as in the car. I have already wired it in to the bikes power source, which was straightforward. I will rig up the very neat Garmin speakers (extra cost) inside my helmet soon and take it out for a test ride.

That is if it stops raining.

Saturday, 5 December 2009

Which Sat Nav?

Using a Sat Nav on a bike has benefits and disadvantages. Some say it takes away some of the freedom of the road that we all adore so much. Some say it simply helps us from getting lost! I am somewhere in the middle – I use one when I really need to, but leave it off the bike most of the time.


When I do use one is normally when I am on a long trip to somewhere I have never been before. For a few years I have been using a Tom Tom Rider and I have found it OK, but only just. Sure, it is clear with a good screen, the route it finds are normally very good, the speed camera warnings are excellent and it is very easy to use. It is only let down by the longer route planning with many waypoints (places you want to go via on the way). In short, I don’t like its longer route planning capabilities and there is no way to save anything but your currently planned journey. Also, I have never really been happy with the way you connect the unit to speakers / earpieces so you can hear the verbal directions.



For my 13,500 mile tour of the USA I definitely needed a Sat Nav, but I wanted something better than the Tom Tom.


I did some research, checked out what each could do, asked a few buddies (thanks Derek), compared features and prices and decided to go for the Garmin Zumo 660.






















Christmas is coming and guess what is going on my list...... Jackie....... ?

Assuming my wife takes the hint, I will let you know how I get on with it during the tour preparations.