Expidia
Commander
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2006
- Messages
- 2,368
Bottom line from my recent experience is their Despicable customer service s*ucks!
I'd shop elsewhere for an electronic map for your GPS if you can rather than try and deal with their reps. I will in the future.
I went with the Hummingbird 797 C2 side imaging GPS/Fishfinding system last month for $999. Very happy with the unit and Humminbird bends over backwards to support you. Navionic's attitude is "you" bend over and assume the position for them!
From what my research found is that these various GPS/Fishfinder units are all pretty much all the same when you are spending $500 to $1000 and up.
So I went with the Hummingbird because they have a unique mount / dismount system that allows the head unit to just plug in without any wires to attach each time. Since my boat is an open one which I trailer, I liked that feature to protect my $1000 investment.
But what I didn't know is now I was stuck buying from Navionics for a mapping chip. I know I can create them myself with software and down load them to an SD card, but I'm not into that. I used to do that with my Garmin handheld and it's a pain using disks and a laptop each time you change regions. I just wanted to pop in a card that covers most of the lakes I use and be good to go. I'm not into using map create either.
So I spent $200 on the Platinum Hotmaps card and then only to find out that this chip does not work with my unit. So the marina dealer was nice enough to swap it for the Gold card (same price) that the Navionics rep I spoke to said "this is the one I need". She told me it's better than the Premium card, because the Premium card is mostly for fishing. That this one is better for navigating. This may be true, but I found it would not even locate two major ports when I was a mile away. Or most NY state boat launches. Places for gas etc. Very sparse on structure too even with the "enhanced map version of the lakes I used it on.
This Gold card covers the entire East Coast and is more designed for the marine coastal navigation boater. It has very little depth contours, which I told her was very important to me because the rivers and lakes I boat on can get shallow, real fast and take out my lower unit. So she clearly recommended the wrong version for my needs.
Now I call them back and say I'm not going back yet again to my marina and ask them to exchange the card yet again as they had to order it each time. They didn't even charge me for overnight shipping each time.
I asked the rep since I already paid $199 could they just swap it for the Premium card (which is only $149 anyway) and it was your rep that steered me wrong in the first place. This guy "Scott Costas" the Navionics rep was pretty obnoxious to talk with. After about 20 minutes of arguing with him that his rep recommended the wrong version for my needs, he finally said he would run it by his manager. Several days later and still no response back from him. Finally 5 days later I leave him a voice mail to just forget it. That I'm going to sell this chip on Ebay and I wish I never got involved with their extremely overpriced product in the first place. Next day he called and I cut him off quickly and said you're too late and I don't care what his "manager" decided now.
Here is the way to beat these JERKS! Never pay retail for one of their ripoff chips. A search on google turned up Cabelas selling the 2006 version for $59.
I've demoed them both in the stores 2006/2007 and there is very little difference for the $199 2007 version. I doubt islands and buoys move around that much from year to year anyway.
My biggest beef is "no one" knows much about their products. Not their own reps I spoke to or the West Marine salesman or the Bass Pro salesman.
This tells me Navionics does a real poor job of training their vendors on their product lines yet they want you to shell out $200 for an electronic map on a $5.00 SD card.
If you are in the market for GPS that uses an electronic map, I would look to Garmin or Lowrance or whichever company does not use Navionics.
I'll probably sell the Gold version on Ebay and also sell the free Fish and Chips card that is a promo item that comes with the Gold version that they claim is a $199 value. I'll dump this one on Ebay too, so I'll come out of a bad experience with more than I paid for the Gold version. I'll continue to use the 2006 Premium Hotmaps chip that I just ordered for $59. This chip will show me the depth contours I need when I'm in unknown areas.
Just my two cents because I see threads started from time to time here asking about these GPS mapping chips . . . avoid Navionics and their p*ss poor, unknowledgable no care customer service and bad attitude along with their "price controlled" overpriced cards.
I'd shop elsewhere for an electronic map for your GPS if you can rather than try and deal with their reps. I will in the future.
I went with the Hummingbird 797 C2 side imaging GPS/Fishfinding system last month for $999. Very happy with the unit and Humminbird bends over backwards to support you. Navionic's attitude is "you" bend over and assume the position for them!
From what my research found is that these various GPS/Fishfinder units are all pretty much all the same when you are spending $500 to $1000 and up.
So I went with the Hummingbird because they have a unique mount / dismount system that allows the head unit to just plug in without any wires to attach each time. Since my boat is an open one which I trailer, I liked that feature to protect my $1000 investment.
But what I didn't know is now I was stuck buying from Navionics for a mapping chip. I know I can create them myself with software and down load them to an SD card, but I'm not into that. I used to do that with my Garmin handheld and it's a pain using disks and a laptop each time you change regions. I just wanted to pop in a card that covers most of the lakes I use and be good to go. I'm not into using map create either.
So I spent $200 on the Platinum Hotmaps card and then only to find out that this chip does not work with my unit. So the marina dealer was nice enough to swap it for the Gold card (same price) that the Navionics rep I spoke to said "this is the one I need". She told me it's better than the Premium card, because the Premium card is mostly for fishing. That this one is better for navigating. This may be true, but I found it would not even locate two major ports when I was a mile away. Or most NY state boat launches. Places for gas etc. Very sparse on structure too even with the "enhanced map version of the lakes I used it on.
This Gold card covers the entire East Coast and is more designed for the marine coastal navigation boater. It has very little depth contours, which I told her was very important to me because the rivers and lakes I boat on can get shallow, real fast and take out my lower unit. So she clearly recommended the wrong version for my needs.
Now I call them back and say I'm not going back yet again to my marina and ask them to exchange the card yet again as they had to order it each time. They didn't even charge me for overnight shipping each time.
I asked the rep since I already paid $199 could they just swap it for the Premium card (which is only $149 anyway) and it was your rep that steered me wrong in the first place. This guy "Scott Costas" the Navionics rep was pretty obnoxious to talk with. After about 20 minutes of arguing with him that his rep recommended the wrong version for my needs, he finally said he would run it by his manager. Several days later and still no response back from him. Finally 5 days later I leave him a voice mail to just forget it. That I'm going to sell this chip on Ebay and I wish I never got involved with their extremely overpriced product in the first place. Next day he called and I cut him off quickly and said you're too late and I don't care what his "manager" decided now.
Here is the way to beat these JERKS! Never pay retail for one of their ripoff chips. A search on google turned up Cabelas selling the 2006 version for $59.
I've demoed them both in the stores 2006/2007 and there is very little difference for the $199 2007 version. I doubt islands and buoys move around that much from year to year anyway.
My biggest beef is "no one" knows much about their products. Not their own reps I spoke to or the West Marine salesman or the Bass Pro salesman.
This tells me Navionics does a real poor job of training their vendors on their product lines yet they want you to shell out $200 for an electronic map on a $5.00 SD card.
If you are in the market for GPS that uses an electronic map, I would look to Garmin or Lowrance or whichever company does not use Navionics.
I'll probably sell the Gold version on Ebay and also sell the free Fish and Chips card that is a promo item that comes with the Gold version that they claim is a $199 value. I'll dump this one on Ebay too, so I'll come out of a bad experience with more than I paid for the Gold version. I'll continue to use the 2006 Premium Hotmaps chip that I just ordered for $59. This chip will show me the depth contours I need when I'm in unknown areas.
Just my two cents because I see threads started from time to time here asking about these GPS mapping chips . . . avoid Navionics and their p*ss poor, unknowledgable no care customer service and bad attitude along with their "price controlled" overpriced cards.
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