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Home > Maintenance & Modifications > GARMIN 1490T Fitting and parts for UK |
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egipp Member Since: 29 May 2009 Location: East Gippsland Posts: 230 |
G'Dat Stuey, I'm very glad my postings were of some help - you certainly put the effort into the painting which will be all to the good. Your mask is also more substantial than mine, which is 1mm thick. I think this may give your's a more 'solid' look; if so, I'll be off to the plastic shop again! I look forward to the pictures. Away from the fitting aspects, I've found the Garmin to be very good as a GPS. I came back from Sydney last week, a trip of around 700 miles and, by way of a change from the Princes Highway, took a 'scenic' route through the Snowy Mountain ranges. The surprising thing was that, apart from having no problems with mapping long stretches of gravel roads and forest tracks, it actually got my time of arrival home - as opposed to journey time - correct to within 15 minutes. Now, how it does that I've little idea, but I was impressed.
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12th Aug 2011 9:37 pm |
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stuey Member Since: 03 May 2011 Location: West MIdlands Posts: 13 |
Thanks Graham
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15th Aug 2011 8:26 am |
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xtd5 Member Since: 18 Apr 2008 Location: Hants. Posts: 125 |
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15th Aug 2011 9:04 am |
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stuey Member Since: 03 May 2011 Location: West MIdlands Posts: 13 |
Hi guys
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15th Aug 2011 12:17 pm |
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chicken george Member Since: 05 Dec 2007 Location: N. Yorks Posts: 13289 |
At work
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15th Aug 2011 3:01 pm |
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stuey Member Since: 03 May 2011 Location: West MIdlands Posts: 13 |
Forgot to mention, the plastic surround is fitted to the garmin unit with double sided tape and then the garmin unit is attached to the surround by various masking tapes and other (whatever i could find really) . Once the sat nav unit is pushed into the cubby hole, it sits good and when the cubby hole is screwed in with the fascia, the plastic cut surround is fixed against the cubby hole and the fascia so it cannot move around. Liek Egipp mentioned, you will need to prize off the black surround on the sat nav unit with a stanley knife (this is clipped into place and easy to seperate) - there will be some knife marks but when the surround is put over the sat nav unit these cannot be seen. |
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15th Aug 2011 4:02 pm |
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stuey Member Since: 03 May 2011 Location: West MIdlands Posts: 13 |
XTD5, yes, the ecoroute does work well. It tells you all about how efficent you are at driving, braking, accelarating, etc. Infact, the whole unit has some great features. I tend to use it not just for GPS but also traffic updates, etc. My old Tom Tom was nothing compared to this........ |
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15th Aug 2011 4:06 pm |
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egipp Member Since: 29 May 2009 Location: East Gippsland Posts: 230 |
G'day Stuey, Excellent paint job, your prep work has really paid off. Two things, the 1mm thick mask fits with no clearance problems and lies flush with the Garmin 'inner' screen. The other thing is that cutting the box to take up the the 3mm mask thickness may mean that the box and the rubber mat won't fit properly when (if) you take the Garmin out when you sell the vehicle. Just thoughts!
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15th Aug 2011 9:57 pm |
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djwhyte Member Since: 24 Aug 2010 Location: Brisbane Posts: 336 |
Heya Stuey,
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15th Aug 2011 10:36 pm |
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stuey Member Since: 03 May 2011 Location: West MIdlands Posts: 13 |
I hope that when i sell this car id keep the sat nav unit in. In this country, to fit the after market sat nav costs in the region of £500-£700 so hopefully i can sell this car with a feature added. Or, i can live with it i suppose, it doesnt look bad in all honesty infact its not really noticeable. But for me, im one of those people that if you see it and you know its there, you cant get it out of your head, so watch this space ill let you know what i do to rectify it.
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16th Aug 2011 8:07 am |
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stuey Member Since: 03 May 2011 Location: West MIdlands Posts: 13 |
Hey DJwhyte
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16th Aug 2011 8:16 am |
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stownrow Member Since: 12 Mar 2010 Location: Harlow Posts: 461 |
I've ordered the 1695 garmin and will have a go at fitting this weekend!
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16th Aug 2011 8:25 pm |
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egipp Member Since: 29 May 2009 Location: East Gippsland Posts: 230 |
Hi Stuey, For reasons best known to Telstra (our BT), my iMac, and the website, I'm unable to load pics to my gallery; been trying for the past couple of days, but no joy. However, if you go to Garmin UK and then search for 'ecoroute HD' you'll get all the details; click on 'more images' and it will show you various screen shots. The OBD socket is just under the dashboard, to the right of the steering column -on RHD Freelanders- and is the socket the Land Rover mechanic plugs his diagnostic tool into; it is standard on most modern cars. You plug the ecoroute HD device into it and it gives, via Bluetooth, a read out on the 1490T of any fault codes, as well as representations of various instruments such as battery condition (the reason I bought it!), fuel pressure, engine load, engine air intake temperature, coolant temperature and so on. To be honest, without a detailed Freelander specification, I'm not sure what some of this information is telling me, but if it did show a fault code you would, by checking it against the fault code listing, know exactly what has gone wrong - at least a starting point with the dealership! It's nice to know the engine is running as it should by the absence of fault codes. It's a read only device, you can't reset the fault code, the dealer has to do that. As far as the information it shows goes, that is determined by the car itself. My i6 petrol model does not have a turbo so gives no reading, but I don't know whether the diesel version would.
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17th Aug 2011 8:26 am |
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