Andy Hird
Registered user
My TomTom gave up the gohst at the wekend after seveal years of faultless service. I absolutely love TomTom, and find it very user friendly. It's also very good at planning routes using the excellent ITN Converter. I especially like the Topography setting in ITN converter when planning routes as you can plan nice routes in hills and mountain regions.
But since my unit has given up (it was actually only a £45 Navigo unit from Ebuyer with TomTom software on it) I've decided to give a Garmin Nuvi 765T a try. The 765T is a very similar spec to the Zumo 660, butis not waterproof and can only accept 10 routes on it.
The 765T has an MP3 player and A2DP stereo bluetooth which I can link to my new Scala, can accept calls via a bluetoothed phone, has full European Mapping, lane assist and 3D building view.......best of all was the deal I got on it..........£72 delivered for a factory refurbed unit !
Now my worry is getting the thing up and running. I seem to remember years ago that I had a load of trouble reistering a new Quest I bought, and also could not get mapsource installed on my PC ??
Can somebody give some advice or tips to make the startup process plain sailing ??
Cheers
Andy
But since my unit has given up (it was actually only a £45 Navigo unit from Ebuyer with TomTom software on it) I've decided to give a Garmin Nuvi 765T a try. The 765T is a very similar spec to the Zumo 660, butis not waterproof and can only accept 10 routes on it.
The 765T has an MP3 player and A2DP stereo bluetooth which I can link to my new Scala, can accept calls via a bluetoothed phone, has full European Mapping, lane assist and 3D building view.......best of all was the deal I got on it..........£72 delivered for a factory refurbed unit !
Now my worry is getting the thing up and running. I seem to remember years ago that I had a load of trouble reistering a new Quest I bought, and also could not get mapsource installed on my PC ??
Can somebody give some advice or tips to make the startup process plain sailing ??
Cheers
Andy