wire3 autocom setuop
Hi,
I have an 08 Autocom System fitter to my 2010 Adventure which I had moved from my previous GSA when I traded in. I have been looking at a new lid And have tried on the Schuberth S2 and it feels good and ticks a lot of the boxes for me. I was also considering the integrated Schuberth bluetoothu it. My question is has anyone tried using the S2 c/w BT in conjunction with the Autocom Wire3 BT module eliminating the headset and cable and if so how did it work?
Any comments or advice would be appreciated.
B
Hello
I thought i'd add my halfpenny's worth. I've been a long time adherent to autocom, and have been attracted by their products' quality. I have two of their systems, and like them both. However, like other folk here, I want to go the wire free route. I got my first GS in 2010 and riding standing on the pegs for long distances, with the occasional tumble

, doesn't lend itself to having the helmet wired to the autocom unit.
I bought a couple of sets of sena smh5s to stick inside helmets - nice kit - can still use my ultimate ears, can plug in my ipod directly, and can go bike to bike up to a klick with line of site.
But... I am in to the idea of having the GPS, the phone, and the PMR all syncing and talking in the right order of priorities, like it was when i had a wired setup. So as soon as i saw the wire3 from autocom i got a couple, one for each bike. For various reasons, I also set up a fairly elaborate system of powering my GSA's top box, for the autocom, with waterproof plugs for the GPS, 12v, the seven pin pillion wired autocom connector, and the PTT. All hunky dory until i plug the wire3 in. The system works fine when I use the seven pin regular wired autocom headset. When I use the Sena to the wire3 connection, it's of a dangerously low quality - dangerous because it is distracting.
I sent the two wire3s back to Cambridgeshire, and they were bench tested, supposedly, and i was told that they were working fine. It's not the fact that the alu top box blocks the BT signal - I've got the other autocom in a plastic top box on my K12RS, and that's no fecking good either.
I've yet to totally give up on the BT autocom solution, and I haven't tinkered with it for a little while, but I intend to, now it's shining over here in France again,

.
So, my advice - don't go for the BT autocom solution. Either go for a Sena SM10 if you want a comprehensive set up, or wait to see if autocom produce something worthy of their once proud reputation.