Hi
Me again, with probably another confused sounding ramble, but could someone just confirm a few things for me please regarding the Bluetooth kit in the new Leon.
1) My drive in the new Civic highlighted a couple of problems with the idea of integrated Bluetooth. The Honda rep told me that due to legality you can't touch the handset while driving, meaning that in order to make a call, the number has to be stored in the car's internal memory, and that if any buttons are pressed on the handset, the call/connection is cut. Is this true of the Leon?
I plan to use the kit for both work and personal usage so it's not exactly practical to have to program everything into the car with every customer I might want to call. Can the car distinguish easily with multiple phones or would it be a mess like my current one is of having to turn Bluetooth on or off on each handset and manually connecting to the car kit if I want to change phone?
2) Is the voice operation any good? Better than the Civics? Does it work by recording samples of you or actually recognising what you say? ie 'Call David', is 'David' a recording of me saying 'David' or does it recognise the word 'David', if that makes any sense?
3) Incoming calls, what happens, does it display the number on the dash and you can accept/reject it from the wheel? Presumably it'll only give the name of the caller if it's stored in the car's memory, it can't actually access the contents of the phone? If so, all this seems rather behind the ones that Nokia and Sony Ericsson do for the same money, if not less, albeit not as tidy as a nice integrated one. My main problem is outgoing calls, having to have the number stored in the car's memory in order to call them, why can't it just passively feed off the handset?
4) Volume, can it be adjusted by the stereo's main volume knob? If I upgraded the stereo to a proper one, would this knacker the phone kit's compatibility?
Thanks in advance
Rob
Me again, with probably another confused sounding ramble, but could someone just confirm a few things for me please regarding the Bluetooth kit in the new Leon.
1) My drive in the new Civic highlighted a couple of problems with the idea of integrated Bluetooth. The Honda rep told me that due to legality you can't touch the handset while driving, meaning that in order to make a call, the number has to be stored in the car's internal memory, and that if any buttons are pressed on the handset, the call/connection is cut. Is this true of the Leon?
I plan to use the kit for both work and personal usage so it's not exactly practical to have to program everything into the car with every customer I might want to call. Can the car distinguish easily with multiple phones or would it be a mess like my current one is of having to turn Bluetooth on or off on each handset and manually connecting to the car kit if I want to change phone?
2) Is the voice operation any good? Better than the Civics? Does it work by recording samples of you or actually recognising what you say? ie 'Call David', is 'David' a recording of me saying 'David' or does it recognise the word 'David', if that makes any sense?
3) Incoming calls, what happens, does it display the number on the dash and you can accept/reject it from the wheel? Presumably it'll only give the name of the caller if it's stored in the car's memory, it can't actually access the contents of the phone? If so, all this seems rather behind the ones that Nokia and Sony Ericsson do for the same money, if not less, albeit not as tidy as a nice integrated one. My main problem is outgoing calls, having to have the number stored in the car's memory in order to call them, why can't it just passively feed off the handset?
4) Volume, can it be adjusted by the stereo's main volume knob? If I upgraded the stereo to a proper one, would this knacker the phone kit's compatibility?
Thanks in advance
Rob