New Tomtom Rider 600 ★ Premium

To mount the device, you simply hover it over the cradle; the magnets pull it into place with a satisfying clunk . It locks automatically—no latches to slide. To remove it, you squeeze two ergonomic triggers on the side.

If you are tired of stopping to wipe rain off your phone screen or pulling over to fix a snapped Quad Lock, test ride the Rider 600. Your next great adventure is just a twisty route away. Available now at RevZilla, TomTom.com, and Amazon. Look for the "Adventure Pack" which includes the rugged bumper case and extra RAM arms.

It loses points for the missing dashcam and the high price, but the core job—getting you lost on purpose and found on time—is executed flawlessly. new tomtom rider 600

If you ride a Harley or Triumph with high vibration levels, the old units sometimes shook loose. The magnetic mount is solid. Furthermore, if you are caught in a sudden downpour, you can rip the unit off your handlebars and stash it in your jacket in under one second. It is genius.

Enter the . Recently unveiled by the Dutch navigation giant, this device aims to reset the benchmark for what a motorcycle sat-nav should be. But in a world where smartphone apps like Calimoto and REVER are getting better every year, does the Rider 600 justify its premium price tag? To mount the device, you simply hover it

The screen is glove-friendly. I tested this with thick Klim snowmobile gloves and thin summer leather gloves; the capacitive touchscreen recognized input instantly. It also has a "rain mode" where you can disable the touchscreen to prevent water drop false triggers, relying purely on the physical buttons on the side. TomTom claims the Rider 600 lasts 6 hours on battery saver mode. In reality (with brightness at 80% and Thrill Seek mode active), I got just under 5 hours.

For decades, motorcyclists have faced a unique tech dilemma. Smartphones are fragile, susceptible to vibration damage ("camera death"), and useless in rain or with gloves on. Dedicated car GPS units lack the ruggedness and specific routing needs of a motorcycle. If you are tired of stopping to wipe

However, there is a catch: The mount requires wired power. It uses a "Smart" connector that detects if you are walking (battery mode) versus riding (charging mode). The heart of any GPS is the routing algorithm. TomTom has introduced Rider-Assist HD Traffic for the 600. Unlike smartphone traffic that relies on other drivers, TomTom uses real-time data from millions of car GPS units and fleet vehicles.