Pleased to help, but if you do fit in this way don't forget the back to back abrasive paper between Ram and Support Bar! The 550 sits forward of the pivot point so does need the extra grip, but mine has never slipped since fitting last summer.
TomTom with a decent remote control that fit close to the LH grip - might be very attractive. The ability to do routes on a tablet to transfer to the unit - could be important for many people too
Even if the Tom Tom is cheaper, replacing the integrated nav V / VI in my book will be like buying a nice Porsche and replace the wheels with 185/70 tires on steel wheels…
In my experience, the nav V has always taken me where I programmed it to go. Additionally, I love the integration with the bike, the lockable setup and the ability to zoom with the wonder wheel. Pricy? Heck, it's mounted on a BMW. The savings on a Tom Tom will as noticeable as a mouse peeing in the ocean...
How so? The Tomtom is a far better as a GPS than the Garmin with its 10 year old looking software. Tomtom also make a lockable mount.
With the exception of the bike info dashboard, the bike integration on the Nav V/VI is poor. They could have done a lot more with it.
Even if the Tom Tom is cheaper, replacing the integrated nav V / VI in my book will be like buying a nice Porsche and replace the wheels with 185/70 tires on steel wheels…
In my experience, the nav V has always taken me where I programmed it to go. Additionally, I love the integration with the bike, the lockable setup and the ability to zoom with the wonder wheel. Pricy? Heck, it's mounted on a BMW. The savings on a Tom Tom will as noticeable as a mouse peeing in the ocean...
Sounds like you need to spend sometime mastering the software thats available for route planning, I only ever have one waypoint and thats my hotel for the evening, all the rest of route criteria is made up of shaping points only and they dont behave the way you describe above, Ive had my Zumo 660 since 2010 and use Mapsource to plan routes for trips, rarely any dramas .I've owned Garmins for years now, both for the car and the bike. After comparing my Garmin to a mate's Tom-Tom, it was inferior on refresh rate, inferior on flexibility of programming (the Tom Tom was much easier to programme for way points and selected journey routes and most importantly, UNLIKE the Garmin, you could bypass a pre selected waypoint without the nav trying to re-route you back).
That was the most infuriating thing of all....not having an easy way to cancel a set waypount on the fly as you can with a Tom Tom. I got fed up stopping to re-programme the thing and after one tour last year, thought I'd check out newer Garmins like the Nav V and VI only to discover they used basically the same OS! I don't get why anyone considers paying close on £600 good value for a garmin that presents bike data that mostly can be brought up on the lCD screen anyway (ok it's easier to read) and the lack of thumbwheel control wouldn't bother me as I don't like playing around on the fly except perhaps to press one button to cancel a way point or to zoom in or out....programme the machine and off you go otherwise.
Old fashioned paper maps always accompany me as gadgets can and do fail.
The reasons that I use the TomTom 550 and not the Nav 5 or 6 being that I bought the GS used, with the Garmin mount but no Garmin included. I already had the TomTom 550 from my previous bike so it was an obvious choice. Had the Bike been fitted with the Garmin I would probably have used that, but in the past had tried an older more basic Garmin and preferred the TomTom system because of familiarity.
For route planning when away from home I use MyRoute-app either on a Phone or Tablet and this transfers the new route direct to the 550 via WiFi. Is this possible with the Nav 5 or 6
Sounds like you need to spend sometime mastering the software thats available for route planning, I only ever have one waypoint and thats my hotel for the evening, all the rest of route criteria is made up of shaping points only and they dont behave the way you describe above
Sounds like you need to spend sometime mastering the software thats available for route planning, I only ever have one waypoint and thats my hotel for the evening, all the rest of route criteria is made up of shaping points only and they dont behave the way you describe above, Ive had my Zumo 660 since 2010 and use Mapsource to plan routes for trips, rarely any dramas .
My mate uses a Tom-tom and you can input set points to plan a route, and if you go wrong or decide to take a detour it just looks for the next point en-route and ignores the one missed. I can't find any way of doing that on my Garmin, because there isn't that functionality on it (It's a Nuvi Traffic car satnav which I have in a waterproof housing).
But bear in mind any shaping points up to the next waypoint will get discarded if the route is recalculated.
I'm a dafty. I've only (to my shame) just looked at the trip planner app again and realised where I've been going wrong for two years now! I first have to plan the route using "via points" then once saved, I can go back into the route planner and change way (via) points to shaping points allowing detours on the hoof or skipping of shaping points.
I haven't yet found a way of just adding them as shaping points in the first place which is a bit annoying. I found the skip next destination button, but in gloved hands my car satnav (encased in it's weatherproof housing) won't respond if the buttons are pressed. I hadn't realised that in trip planner that I could change destination points to shaping points until today. Holding your finger over any destination point in the trip planner app changes it to a shaping point so that when on a journey, it doesn't matter if I skip a shaping point as the satnav continues towards the next shaping point. That's all I'd been after for ages....must say it's not that intuitive. Seemed much easier to do on the Tom-Tom.