NAV-TV Bluetooth Adapter for 997
#1
NAV-TV Bluetooth Adapter for 997
I have just had a "Release Candidate" prototype Bluetooth adapter from NAV-TV installed in my 07 C2S. It connects into the MOST ring just as do the NAV-TV iPod adapter and Sirius satellite radio adapter that I previously had installed. The Bluetooth adapter allows control of a Bluetooth cell phone via the PCM's buttons and *****, including initiating and answering calls using the "lift handset" button at the upper left of the PCM, hanging up via the "end call" button just to the right of that, dialing calls via the PCM numeric keypad, syncing the cell phone's phonebook such that it is accessible through the PCM, making calls from the synced phonebook, displaying incoming caller information on the PCM screen, muting the radio or CD during calls, etc. Call quality is excellent, as is the sound through the car's main speaker system.
The only flaw I have found with my adapter's software version is that it doesn't sync the cell phone's entire phonebook, just the first 60 or so entries. NAV-TV has just shipped me an updated adapter based on my feedback which should correct this one issue. I have paired both an iPhone and a Blackberry 8700 with the NAV-TV adapter with no other issues than the partial phonebook transfer. When I get the new adapter installed next week, I'll post whether or not it has cured this problem.
NAV-TV tells me the final version of the adapter should be ready for formal release through retail channels within the next month.
I had my Bluetooth adapter, as well as my satellite radio adapter and iPod adapter, installed by Custom Car Stereo in Houston, who did their usual excellent job. The Bluetooth adapter installation took well less than an hour.
I posted this same information over at Rennlist but thought it might also be of interest here. Glad to try to answer any questions.
The only flaw I have found with my adapter's software version is that it doesn't sync the cell phone's entire phonebook, just the first 60 or so entries. NAV-TV has just shipped me an updated adapter based on my feedback which should correct this one issue. I have paired both an iPhone and a Blackberry 8700 with the NAV-TV adapter with no other issues than the partial phonebook transfer. When I get the new adapter installed next week, I'll post whether or not it has cured this problem.
NAV-TV tells me the final version of the adapter should be ready for formal release through retail channels within the next month.
I had my Bluetooth adapter, as well as my satellite radio adapter and iPod adapter, installed by Custom Car Stereo in Houston, who did their usual excellent job. The Bluetooth adapter installation took well less than an hour.
I posted this same information over at Rennlist but thought it might also be of interest here. Glad to try to answer any questions.
#2
One of the major complaints of the Dension bluetooth kit is the problem with microphone placement and volume. Have you experienced any similar problems with sound volume using the Nav-TV kit?
How much does the Ipod and Bluetooth kit cost? thanks
How much does the Ipod and Bluetooth kit cost? thanks
#3
I'll have to double-check how much my iPod adapter was when I get home from my weekend trip. The Bluetooth adapter I have is a prototype piece and as such the amount I paid for it ($490 plus installation) is less than it is going to retail for, according to the Nav-TV guy from whom I bought it directly. How much less I don't know.
#4
The interface sounds much better than the Dension since you can use the numerical buttons to dial on the PCM and transfer contacts into the phone book. Do you know if the microphone is noise-cancelling?
When you called someone from your car via bluetooth, what was their feedback to you regarding sound quality?
Thanks,
When you called someone from your car via bluetooth, what was their feedback to you regarding sound quality?
Thanks,
#6
The interface sounds much better than the Dension since you can use the numerical buttons to dial on the PCM and transfer contacts into the phone book. Do you know if the microphone is noise-cancelling?
When you called someone from your car via bluetooth, what was their feedback to you regarding sound quality?
Thanks,
When you called someone from your car via bluetooth, what was their feedback to you regarding sound quality?
Thanks,
I'm out of town this weekend, but I'll try to post some pictures of what the PCM screens look like when I get home.
#7
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#10
Yes. You can directly dial using the numeric keypad on the left side of the PCM. By "porsche the kit", I assume you mean where did I purchase it (although I like the idea of porsche and purchase being synonymous). I got the adapter directly from NaV-TV after having a telephone conversation with the head of Nav-TV after an exchange of emails. He says that the final version should be released through their retail distribution outlets within a month.
#11
Just for clarification, I have no affiliation with Nav-TV, and I am not receiving any compensation for posting about the "Tooki" Bluetooth adapter. I'm just a Porsche buff who is also a gadget geek.
#13
No, it takes a separate (but compatible) iPod adapter to go along with the Bluetooth adapter. I have both as well as the Nav-TV Sirius Satellite Radio adapter. Other than the cost of having to buy three adapters, it works great, just as if they were factory options. With respect to the Dension, doesn't it require both the Gateway 500 for the iPod as well as a separate Bluetooth add-on that plugs into the Gateway 500? I think the difference (other than user interface and functionality) is that the Nav-TV devices all each hook directly into the MOST fiber optic ring whereas the Dension Gateway 500 hooks into the MOST ring, and the Dension Bluetooth Adapter then plugs into the Gateway 500.
#14
I wonder how it is able to interface with the PCM , and preserve all the PCM phone functions , by just entering the FIOS loop? I thought the 666 option required a separate module that had to be installed in the PCM, not merely placed in the FIOS loop?
#15
I would suggest you pose that question to Nav-TV via their "Contact Us" link on their website. I would guess that the adapter has the appropriate logic to communicate with the PCM in much the same manner as the iPod adapter and satellite radio adapters do. The Dension and Nav-TV iPod adapters both seem to utilize the PCM's logic for CD changers, and the Nav-TV satellite radio adapter similarly emulates the factory satellite radio module of the Cayenne to interface with the PCM, so I suppose it is doing something similar with the telephone function.