OK so taking a deep breath.
It is clear that whether one is discussing a satnav,a bike, or anything else that some `features' which are peripheral to the main purpose will be of limited use. Tracking, for example is a facility which some may find useful but other will not use it. As its only purpose is to keep alog of where you have been, its use is clearly limited.
Its pointless to spend time on the Rider 1 problems
A partial quote as it is noted that these problems are well documented. It is also a fact that as one can no longer buy a Rider 1 as it has been replaced with the Rider 2 it is pointless to document the problems which existed.
we found this quite useful
Where is the problem with noting something that we found useful but others may not.
OK so `so bad' is a subjective opinion. I did not want to dwell on detail as, eventually Tomtom came good. A little more detail. From sending the unit back it was four weeks before I was told anything despite two email enquiries. After advising that they would be sending a replacement shortly it took 11 days to advise delivery and another 5 to deliver.It then took another two weeks, three emails (with no response) two phone calls (after an hour of holding the line) to get the code needed to load the maps. Ithink `so bad' is a rather mild criticism.
In addition, you use the expression "my experience" in place of "my opinion" to represent your opinion as fact: "my experience is that Garmin is head and shoulders above Tomtom", "My experience is that I would hate to have a fault on a Rider...". Given that your experience happened in the past, to transpose it into the present or conditional tenses is conjecture, and therefore not fact, but opinion.
Any valid comment that anyone makes about anything can only be based on personal experience whether this is based on research, use or anything else.It is also rather obvious that any comment on anything must be based on the past as its rather tough to comment on the future. If either Tomtom or Garmin improve on anything in their systems, again, a report on that is based on the past.
Unlike a number of posts found on various forums I have avoided third party opinions and comments such as `my mate had one and it was no good'. As an example, I clearly state that from MY EXPERIENCE I would hate to have a Rider fail shortly before a major trip but but from MY EXPERIENCE of Garmin I would have more confidence. This is a factual comment, not subjective.
I note you qualify your knowledge of the Zumo, but not your knowledge of the Tomtom. Your explanation of the limits of Tomtom's usage is based upon your own limited knowledge, not on reality. You do not mention that Tomtom has been producing maps of Central Europe for some time. To say that Tomtom does not cover Poland, for example, is incorrect. The fact that this mapping costs extra can easily be contrasted to the price difference of the two units to provide an objective view of their respective map coverage in relation to cost. But you chose not to.
My post clearly states that I am comparing experience of Garmin and Tomtom based on wide experience of the 2720 and Rider. I rightly note where I am unsure whether my experience appliesto the Zumo but have no reason to qualify comments on the Rider.To say my comments are not based on reality is clearly rubbish as I have stated that I have used it in a very wide range of situations over a long period.
I do not mention that Tomtom have maps of Central Europe, neither do I mention that they have maps of the USA, Australiaand many other places. Neither did I mention that Garmin have a large range of maps. What is more important is the valid point that in the UK both Rider and Garmins are offered with mapping of Europe and it is a factual comment that Garmin maps cover a larger area. This is a valid point to make to potential purchasers as it affects a like to like comparision on the cost of the units and in that context it is correct. If you read my post again, nowhere do I say that Tomtom do not cover Poland (I have their Poland map). I DO say that Tomtom's Western Europe maps don't and they are the maps you get when you buy it.
You wrote in detail of the advantages Garmin's Mapsource functionality compared to Tomtom Home while failing to mention that there are many free-to-download utilities which enable a Tomtom to be used in almost every way that a Garmin can, not to mention the facilty to convert routes and POI's between formats, interaction with Microsoft Autoroute, Mappoint, Google Earth, and to provide real time tracking.
Yes I failed to mention third party software but I thought we were comparing Tomtom with Garmin. Yes there is a lot of third party software that one get use with the Tomtom, as there is with the Garmin. You mention Google Earth, Garmin Mapsource directly interacts with it. The Garmin Comunicator browser plug-in when used with takeitwithme,com allows Garmin units to download routes and waypoints defined in Google My Maps without any conversion. It is, just about, possible touse a Tomtom with Autoroute but its messy, requires knowledge and, of course, one must buy Auroroute first. I have done it to get Europe routes into the Rider but its a workaround to the dedicated facility of Mapsource.
Did you mention customisable menus, does the Garmin offer this, what about the Tomtom? I could go on.
Maybe you are one up on me here as the only `customisation' I can find in Tomtom menus is a facility to go from `simple' to `advanced'. The former simply blanks out some options. Of course Tomtom does have the frustrating function of blanking out most options once the unit is fitted to a motorcycle. Also available on Garmin but one can switch it off.
Then there are many other things I didn't mention to try to avoid making the post overly long. For example the annoying trait of the Tomtom in not allowing a destination to be entered if satellite fix is lost without first going into an advanced planning option and setting a start point - which one cannot do when its fitted to a bike as the advanced option is not available. The Garmin letsd you enter a destination and just sorts itself out once it gets a fix.
Neither did I mention that the Tomtom is better on retaining a satellite fix when indoors or a number of other things that ae unlikely to affect real world use.
Perhaps the effect is compounded by your knowledge of the Tomtom Rider's capabilities appearing to be inconsistent with the authority with which you purport to speak.
Now here is a comment not backed up by fact. As already noted, the Rider has been used extensively in a wide range of situations as has my Ipaq 5935 which uses Tomtom software. Relatively unusually I can offer an EXACT comparison of the two units in exactly the same circumstances as my wife and I tour on our own bikes with the Rider on one and the Garmin on the other.
Finally it may be of interest to know how we finished up with both and did not standardise. The Rider was purchased first but the bracket failed shortly before a trip. I contacted Tomtom via their customer service website, got a useless reply three days later, contacted them again and the next day got a reply requesting that I send it back and repair or replacement would take three weeks. As I did not have three weeks available I decided to buy a BMW Navigator II. My very honest BMW dealer told me it was overpriced and recommended I purchase a 2720 which savd me £400 and was a better system. To avoid the long wait for service, on my return, I purchased a new bracket but that failed as well so the whole lot was eventually returned to Tomtom and replaced. My may also be of interest to note that my background with satnavs goes back to using a Garmin GPS 12 for backpacking (I am a British Mountaineering Council Mountain Leader) and for road use, a Psion with Tomtom software (under their old name) using the GPS 12 plumbed in to provide the GPS fix. Not great due to the old US government random accuracy policy, thankfully now a thing of the past, but useful on occasions.