mislead by dealer about Bluetooth
#1
mislead by dealer about Bluetooth
Anyone else feel they were mislead by the H-D dealer? I was told that the new system in my 2014 Limited was fully Bluetooth to my Sena SPH10H-FM headset. after purchasing it and riding home I find that it's only Bluetooth friendly to cell phones, the on board GPS only comes over the bikes speakers. I love the bike itself, just extremely disappointed with Boom features, now I have to remount my zumo 660 to have GPS instructions to my Bluetooth headset. come on Harley lets move into the 21st century.....
#3
That was my issue. My salesperson just wasn't educated on the issue. He mentioned to me he'd tried two bluetooth headsets and couldn't get either to connect. I had to let him know later (after I found out how terrible Harley engineers are at designing Bluetooth systems) no headsets would work and to make sure future customers weren't as disappointed as me.
#4
Why would you want two GPS systems on your bike? Why not just left the commands come out the bike speakers? I have the 4.3 and use the gps on my phone. I just set the route hit go and stick the phone in the fairing pocket. Commands come right thru the speakers and I follow. At least you get the map and commands together.
#6
I understand your frustration... I knew it wouldn't work when i bought mine, so my plan was always to use a wired headset, its a pain i know, but that was my plan... since l liked the way the Nolan wired headset fit in my Nolan N104 helmet, I purchased it to use with my Limited... on my recent 9 day trip, it broke for the second time ( they use mini usb connectors for the cable ends at the helmet ) its being repaired at there service center, for the second time.
What riders who don't have the wired headset ability yet have the 6.5 system don understand, is that it is designed for voice activated use. almost all of the command functions can be voice activated... on my trip i began to depend on was voice activation for calls, Navigation changes, and locatin POI's ( mostly food ) as we approached cities on our trip..
When my headset malfunctioned it was extremely frustrating, as I would have to use the handle bar controls for some of the functions, and some functions are not accessible in that way when the bike is moving. Since the guys i was riding didn't have CB capability, they all had bluetooth, the only way i could communicate with them was thru phone calls... when headset quit working had to go to hand signals...
The bluetooth limitation ( its the design of bluetooth specification ) is not Harley's fault, and won't be fixed until the industry designs a better Bluetooth spec.
My next trip, i'm going to abandon the built in system for a bluetooth headset and use my phone for everything the head unit does...
Either way, unless you plan on using a wired headset, the built in head unit is useless... I would have still bought this bike, with out the 6.5 head unit for its other improvements, but this is a feature that the marketing leverages heavily as a selling point, yet you loose most of its functionality if you don't use a wired headset...
Now if they could just add bike to bike bluetooth to the 6.5 system, i wouldn't mind the wired headset quite as much...
What riders who don't have the wired headset ability yet have the 6.5 system don understand, is that it is designed for voice activated use. almost all of the command functions can be voice activated... on my trip i began to depend on was voice activation for calls, Navigation changes, and locatin POI's ( mostly food ) as we approached cities on our trip..
When my headset malfunctioned it was extremely frustrating, as I would have to use the handle bar controls for some of the functions, and some functions are not accessible in that way when the bike is moving. Since the guys i was riding didn't have CB capability, they all had bluetooth, the only way i could communicate with them was thru phone calls... when headset quit working had to go to hand signals...
The bluetooth limitation ( its the design of bluetooth specification ) is not Harley's fault, and won't be fixed until the industry designs a better Bluetooth spec.
My next trip, i'm going to abandon the built in system for a bluetooth headset and use my phone for everything the head unit does...
Either way, unless you plan on using a wired headset, the built in head unit is useless... I would have still bought this bike, with out the 6.5 head unit for its other improvements, but this is a feature that the marketing leverages heavily as a selling point, yet you loose most of its functionality if you don't use a wired headset...
Now if they could just add bike to bike bluetooth to the 6.5 system, i wouldn't mind the wired headset quite as much...
#7
I see your point and it makes me realize just how old school my group is when we travel..lol.. If we need to talk to each other we do it at gas stops, when we pull into a town we usually pull over at a gas station grap a smoke and discuss what's there and what everyone wants to eat. If were driving down the road and someone needs to stop they pull to the front and take the next exit and we follow. Hell we all have gps in either our phones or bikes but we still break out the old riders map when discussing route changes and possibilities...lol... I don't know what I would do if they tried to call me driving down the road...lol
Trending Topics
#8
Anyone else feel they were mislead by the H-D dealer? I was told that the new system in my 2014 Limited was fully Bluetooth to my Sena SPH10H-FM headset. after purchasing it and riding home I find that it's only Bluetooth friendly to cell phones, the on board GPS only comes over the bikes speakers. I love the bike itself, just extremely disappointed with Boom features, now I have to remount my zumo 660 to have GPS instructions to my Bluetooth headset. come on Harley lets move into the 21st century.....
#9
It isn't a limitation in the Bluetooth spec. Bluetooth supports headsets, it's called headset protocol. Harley failed to implement it in their code. The good news is it's only a software change, IF Harley implements it. Most Garmin GPS do this already. You can connect to it with a Bluetooth headset and it can connect to other devices (like your phone) as a headset itself, all with a single Bluetooth radio. So yes, it is Harley's fault.
#10
Unfortunately, the Bluetooth profiles don't reflect the needs and desires of a motorcycle rider/system. They are designed with cars and telephones in mind. The HD system is just like any car Bluetooth system or Bluetooth helmet, where Bluetooth is used to interface with phones and music devices using the HFP and A2DP profiles only. In the car, the Harley and the Bluetooth helmet systems, the microphone and speakers are hardwired.