schiannini said:
I haven't seen the new range - they used to put their mark up on a non waterproof huge nokia car kit, has this improved?
Going off the 2006 brochure, it is indeed still the non waterproof Nokia Bluetooth Car Kit.
Part number 1263 (old part number 55.6) which goes for 90 squid.
It appears you also need Part number 1262 (old part number 55.5) which is a dual isolated interface lead for the Nokia car kit for another 30 squid (its possible this is only needed on some bikes, but the brochure is very vague).
Either way, the Starcom1 Bluetooth module (
http://www.starcom1.com/bluetooth.htm ) is 1p cheaper at 89.99 squid and doesn't need a dual isolated interface lead - I've used mine both on a ignition power supply bike and a raw battery powered bike and it works fine on both (which is the only difference as far as I'm aware - I could be wrong!).
Autocom are true to their word btw and have supplied a TomTom Rider interface cable (to go with the Riders bluetooth adaptor offering) called part number 1297. This very simple 2.5 mm 4 pole jack to a 3.5 mm 4 pole jack cable is all yours for the princely sum of 24 squids. Given it must take maybe 5 squid in parts to make one yourself (less if you reuse one of the cables TomTom supply with the rider), I'd hope it was gold plated using rare earth metals in the cable itself to give super high quality audio to be worth that much
For the following, lets pretend that Intaride have a bluetooth offering at 80 squid (they don't, but its a value common to Starcom1 and Autocom).
Comparing apples with apples with apples (i.e. the Advance with Bluetooth and cables vs the Super Pro AVi with Bluetooth and cables vs the RP1 with Bluetooth and cables) gives a very clear indication:
Starcom1: 249.95 (standard price before shipping)
Autocom: 289.74 (promo price before shipping - 346.00 for standard price before shipping) Add another 30 squid if you need the dual isolated interface lead.
Intaride: 209.00 (standard price before shipping)
As I've said before - if Intaride had a Bluetooth option, I would have gone with Intaride.
I can't find the size of Autocom's equivalent to the Advance unit anywhere on their site. I can't find the size of Intaride's RP1 unit either. Starcom1 put theirs in the detail (1”x2”x3”) and its quite clear just from the pictures available that the Advance unit is much smaller than the Super Pro AVi. The RP1 appears to be on the same scale as the Advance.
This is electronics, big is not beautiful (or necessary) - espeically when looking at how much space is on your average motorcycle for these kind of accessories.
The clear winner on price is Intaride - if you don't want a bluetooth module that is. If you do, go with Starcom1. If you have more money than sense (or are afraid to change your mind in the light of cold hard facts) then go with Autocom.
Enjoy!