Tag Archives: Technology

High Tech Motorcycle Accessories That Every Rider Must Have

(Sponsored tech post)

Every day, new technology is introduced to motorcycle gadgets to improve the riding experience and make it safer. More and more of the modern bikes have heated seats/grips, tire pressure monitors, rearview cameras, and more. Today, you can find some high tech accessories that will help you deal with discomfort, inconvenience, and weather. Even if you prefer the traditional route, there are several high tech gadgets that can elevate your experience. Below are some of the high-tech gadgets you can get to pimp up your ride.

1 Helmet Sound System

If you ride your bike regularly or for long distances, you’re likely to feel dull at times. Well, this can change with a helmet sound system which lets you listen to music and communicate. You can pick phone calls, connect with other riders via intercom, and follow GPS navigation using the helmet audio systems.  When buying this gadget, look out for multi-device capability, sound quality, durability, battery life, and volume controls.

2 Motorcycle GPS Navigator

It’s never an option to use your smartphone for navigation while riding a bike unless you’re willing to stop and get off the road every time. That’s why you need a motorcycle GPS unit. A motorcycle GPS makes it easy for you to navigate while you focus on the road. In addition, the system offers extra features such as hands-free calling, streaming music, and alerts.

3 Rearview Camera

A rearview camera helps you to easily see what’s behind you, adding safety and convenience to your ride. Rearview cameras for motorcycles give you a rear vision that your rear mirrors can’t. The mini camera is usually placed on the bumper of your bike, giving you a perfect view of your rear. When buying a review camera, look out for key features like waterproof, night vision, and viewable angle.

4 Motorcycle Jacket Airbag

The motorcycle jacket airbag works in a more or less similar manner as the airbags in a car. When the system deploys the airbag, the air cushion inflates to protect the most vulnerable body parts such as shoulders, elbows, and the spine. You can use an airbag vest which can also serve as a reflective vest or get an airbag jacket. Modern airbags strike a balance between comfort, safety, and good looks.

5 Brake Free Helmet Light

The normal brake lights on your motorcycle work just fine. However, they are mounted low on your motorbike and are not easily noticeable in traffic. Brake Free Helmet Light mounts a smart brake light on the back of your helmet, making it easier for motorists to see you. It detects when you’re slowing down and responds accordingly to regular braking, engine braking, and emergency braking. It attaches to almost any helmet using a magnetic mount and uses LED lights that make it visible both day and night. It is a smart brake because it needs no wired installation or connected apps. The gadget is weather resistant and stays lit all the time, only becoming brighter when you brake.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

TomTom Rider 550 unveils hidden gem

If it wasn’t for the ride-sharing and mountain and wriggly route options on our TomTom Rider 550 GPS we might never have discovered a hidden gem of a mountain road.

Riding partner and map expert Peter “Worldmapman” Davis recently reviewed the TomTom Rider 550 for us and has been using it now for some time.

Usually one of our riding group decides where to go and then leads the pack. It’s usually me and I’ve almost run out of routes in the South East Queensland area.

I think I know every twisting, winding scenic roads in this region. But I was wrong.

TomTom decides

TomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav gem
“Plan a thrill’ with TomTom Rider 550

This time we decided to put the TomTom unit to the test and let it decide a route for us.

Since it was hot, we thought a ride up to Toowoomba at the top of the Great Dividing Range would give us a respite from the heat.

So we put that in as one waypoint, plus Hampton and Flagstone Creek.

You can select the waypoints by typing in a place name or simply pressing a point on the screen to drop a waypoint “flag”.

We then selected a return journey with maximum mountain and winding roads options. There are two levels of each and we chose the top levels.

That increased an out-and-back journey on the highway from about 160km to about 250km.

Because we were riding cruisers, we chose the “avoid dirt roads” option. You can also choose to avoid toll roads, highways and even roadworks in the settings menu.

Sharing a gem

TomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav gem
Sharing a route is easy

Route selected, we shared it among ourselves either with other TomTom GPS units or via their MyDrive app platform on their phones.

Sharing a route like this is great because it means you don’t have to bother about corner-man systems as riders can’t get lost.

You can plan your route on the GPS unit, or on the TomTom MyDrive app on your phone or your computer. Each allows you to share with other TomTom users via Bluetooth, email or message.

When we headed off on the Brisbane Valley Highway TomTom almost immediately took us off the highway on to back roads.

Map expert reviews TomTom Rider 550 route
TomTom will include scenic back roads

This led us the long way round to Esk before heading up the only sealed road to Hampton.

In fact, it even bypassed some of Esk.

Peter says a good tip in selecting waypoints on this sort of route is to never select a town’s CBD or the name of a town.

TomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav gem
Following the route

Always select a waypoint on a road past the town. That will actually throw in a nice little deviation and avoid sending you down every suburban street.

In fact, you should even start your journey out of town or it may take you on a wild goose chase around the suburbs first.

The great thing about the TomTom Rider 550 is that you can change your mind along the way.

If you decide to go into town for a coffee or toilet stop, just head on in and the unit recalculates the route very quickly.

In fact, it is the fastest of any unit Peter has used in his extensive mapping career.

You can also add more waypoints, or change the winding road option from super wriggly to less wiggly or to the fastest or most direct route if you are getting tired and want to head home.

TomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav Peter Davis map
Wriggly route

All it takes is a touch of a button on the screen.

If you decide to bypass a waypoint, the unit will try to recalculate you back to it, so it’s a good idea to delete the waypoint by going to your list of stops and deleting it.

Gem discovered

We largely followed the directions, but also chose to ignore them a little and explore.

But we are glad we did not ignore its advice when we came down the Range on Flagstone Creek Rd.

It pointed left on to Blanchview Rd which we have done before and enjoyed, so we followed.

TomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav gem
Silver Pinch Rd is a gem

But shortly after TomTom took us right on to Silver Pinch Rd which looks almost like someone’s driveway. We’ve ignored this road in the past … but not today.

Just as well as it is a real rider’s gem.

It traverses several narrow ridges past Table Top Mountain, overlooking beautiful fertile farmland with jaw-dropping views on either side.

The road really does wriggle along and it seems it has only recently been paved along its entirety until it becomes Topps Rd and ends at the T junction with the Back Flagstone Creek Rd.TomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav gem

What a rollercoaster of a road it is with plenty of elevation, looping corners, esses and switchbacks.

We enjoyed it so much we stopped along the way for photos and doubled back a bit to ride some sections again.

Consequently we ended up running a little behind our schedule return time.

So at Laidley we simply decided to switch to the shortest destination and head home.

When we got home, we shared photos and maps with each other via MyDrive so we can do it again another time … maybe in a reverse direction.

You can do that by simply shuffling the order of the waypoints. Just drag and drop the last stop to the top and make the rest of the changes accordingly.

Click here for our route.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

What does time mean to an easy rider?

Peter Fonda famously throws away his watch in the cult 1969 movie Easy Rider, starting a fad with riders and other travellers to discard their watches and disregard the constraints of time.

A watch is a symbol of “the man”, society and capitalism that constrain us.

Motorcycles are freedom machines that allow us to escape the rigours of timekeeping.

In a hilarious parody of the famous Easy Rider scene, John Travolta and his buddies throw away their mobile phones before a cross-country ride in the 2007 movie Wild Hogs.

“You don’t need a GPS to discover America; you need a bike and you need the road, ok? Freedom,” says Travolta.

Exactly!

There are no deadlines on the open road. Even sunset is no limit.

So there really is no need for a watch. Besides, you can’t see it under your jacket sleeve and gloves when riding.

Besides, most bikes these days have clocks, although I have my bike’s screen set to the trip meter, rather than the clock.

Time collaborations

Yet motorcycle companies have had a long association with watch companies over time.

The latest is the Ducati-Locman collection with prices ranging from €299 to €598.Ducati watch What does time mean to a rider? watch

Other motorcycle manufacturers have had similar exclusive watches in recent years so devoted fans can wear their “heart” on their sleeve – or wrist!

They include: a Ducati Scrambler watch in 2015 with Swiss watchmaker Tudor; Indian Motorcycle with Swiss watchmaker Baume & Mercier; a BMW GS watchBMW boxer watch designed by Marc Jenni; and a host of Harley-Davidson watches with New York company Bulova.

Do you wear a watch when riding or leave it at home? Leave your comments below.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

What do riders know or care about GPS?

Map and satnav expert Peter (World Mapman) Davis provides some interesting background information for riders on GPS in this fourth instalment in our satnav series.

You can check out the other articles by clicking on the topic: Satnav for beginners, planning a route and reading a map the right way. You can also ask Peter any tech questions on satnav by clicking here.

What is GPS?

Global Positioning Systems (GPS) use satellites that are in a geo-stationary orbit. That means they rotate at the same speed as the Earth so they remain in the same place above the globe.

You need at least three satellite beams to “triangulate” your position, which means it is the average position between the three beams.

The original satellites were sent into orbit by the US military for their use in navigation.

However, tech-savvy people soon found out how to communicate with them and use their navigation services.

When US authorities discovered that their satellite navigation systems were being used by civilians, they allowed what they called “selective availability”.

They actually built in some positioning inaccuracy.

TomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav Peter Davis map
Map expert Peter Davis

Military GPS

If the military needed to use their satellites for operations, they would simply turn off selective availability and suddenly people would get very accurate positions.

It became evident that this was a very useful tool for the civilian population, so the last Bill President Bill Clinton signed was the abolition of selective availability.

These days we now get more accurate readings as there are a lot more satellites in orbit that belong to other countries and even commercial operations.

To obtain an accurate position, a GPS device needs to have at least three satellite connections.

A satellite is a transmitter, not a receiver. It transmits a signal which the GPS picks up.

The more satellites you get the more accurate your position.

Early GPS

Early GPS devices had a very narrow beam of reception to gain signals from satellites.

This made them lose satellite reception very easily if you were riding in dense forest or even through cities with tall buildings.

Europe motorcycle travel parking Italy tunnel GPS satnav

All GPS units need line of sight with satellites.

However, newer GPS units have a broad spectrum of reception which is basically horizon to horizon.

Consequently, so long as you can see some sky, it works. The satellite doesn’t need to be straight above.

They also now work in some tunnels that have repeaters in the roof to beam the satellite signal.

Land beacons

Satnav has become even more accurate with the introduction of ground-based GPS nav beacons or “differential nav”.

Your position can be triangulated using a combination of satellites and land beacons which can be radio transmitters or mobile phone towers.

Early on, they used the Triple J radio signal.

Land beacons improve position accuracy from about 5m to 1m, or even less depending on how close you are to a land beacon.

The real advantage is that they are very accurate for vertical elevation or altitude.

Surveyors even use them and it helps adventure and off-road riders using topographical satnav.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

A year of motorbike technology

Technology dominated motorcycle news this year with jet thrusters to prevent low-siders, sidecars with a drone launching pad, plus self-riding, self-balancing and even flying motorcycles.

While most of these are fanciful or far-off innovations, there was some advance in more useable technology.

Ducati and KTM have made giant leaps forward with Bosch developing blind spot alerts to prevents sideswipe accidents and adaptive cruise control that keeps  the bike a set distance from vehicles in front.

Big Bosch tech

Bosch tests jet thruster year
Bosch tests jet thruster

But the biggest tech story of the year for us was the Bosch jet thrusters that prevent low-siders.

The system uses pressurised gas to blast a jet of air out of the high side of the bike when sensors, gyroscopes and accelerometers detect the wheels sliding sideways.

This sudden jet of air is designed to help counteract the slide pressures and lift the bike back up.

ON the one hand, it would be great to have tech that would prevent low-sides, but just how much will this add to the weight of the bike and its expense.

And, like an airbag inflator it would be a one-time activation, so you would be up for the expense of a new activator after it’s been deployed.

Given the problems with faulty Takata airbags, we’re not so sure about this tech.

Quirky tech of the year

There have been some quirky bits of tech this year.

One of the most interesting is Suzuki beacon light that shines on the roof to make traffic aware of the rider’s presence.

They filed for a patent this year so it may be a while before that comes to market.

Furion M1 Hybrid SportBike with Wankel rotary engine year
Furion M1 Hybrid SportBike

Then there’s the Furion M1 hybrid motorcycle from France that has a Wankel rotary engine  and an electric motor. So far, its only CAD images on a computer screen.

And here’s some tech you never thought you would need that will be available soon in Australia.

The Russian Ural AIR outfit includes a DJI Spark drone and a special discrete and waterproof compartment with a launching platform!

And while a new electric motorcycle company seems to spring up every week this year, Ural also unveiled its plans for the world’s first electric outfit with batteries under the chair.

URAL electric sidecar prototype year
URAL electric sidecar prototype

Perhaps the strangest tech is the Lazareth La Moto Volante Maserati V8-powered four-wheel leaning motorcycle with jet turbines in the wheels s it can fly like a drone.

La Moto Volante is planned for release on January 31.

Maserati Quattroporte engine powers this Lazareth LM 847 quad concept flying year
Maserati Quattroporte engine powers this Lazareth LM 847 quad concept

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Do you turn your paper map or GPS to face north?

Should north be at the top of your paper map or GPS satnav device for the best guidance? Satnav and mapping expert Peter (World Mapman) Davis looks into the phenomenon in the third part of our satnav series.

Paper maps always have north at the top. However, you can just as easily turn the map around to face the direction you are going.

GPS satnav units also have north at the top when showing your position on a map and sometimes even when a route has been selected.

However, they usually default to having the direction you are going at the top when you start navigation mode.

Map expert reviews TomTom Rider 550
TomTom Rider 550

You can overrule that by selecting the option to have north at the top.

So which is the right way?

I believe those who turn a map in the direction they are going may actually be better map readers.

Turning the map so the top is the direction you are heading allows you to get your bearings.

It also makes more sense. If you need to turn left, you turn left.

Having north at the top is not the wrong way to do it, but it does require your brain to do another process.Map expert reviews TomTom Rider 550 paper map

For example, if you are heading south, then a left turn becomes a right turn on the map.

This can become confusing and is often the cause of navigation errors.

On a motorcycle it is also better and safer to have a simple process as riding already takes a lot of mental activity.

Some people can do both methods. Some can only do one.

But people who say they are a terrible navigator are usually those who persist with the north-at-the-top orientation.

I can make them a good navigator just by turning their map around.

Are paper maps obsolete?TomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav Peter Davis map paper map

It seems GPS satnav devices and smartphones with maps have taken over the world.

In fact, some experts say the reliance on satnav has robbed millennials of their sense of direction.

I say use both.

Before you start your road trip and every day before you start the next leg of your ride, get out a paper map.

It shows you the whole route and gives you a good idea of distances and perspectives.

Also, when satnav fails — and it periodically does — you will have some idea of working out which direction to go.

A paper map is a great fallback and the image in your head will also help you find your way.

If you blindly follow satnav guidance it is just like following someone’s taillights.

Click here to find out about types of satnav guidance.

Click here to learn how to plan a route.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

How to plan a ride route on GPS

Map and satnav expert Peter (World Mapman) Davis tell us how to plan a ride route on a GPS in this second in a series on satnav.

In the first in this series, we talked about the different types of Satnav: moving maps and guidance navigation. 

Planning a route moving maps

TomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav Peter Davis map route
Moving maps

Using moving maps, you can select points on the map which creates a waypoint file.

These can be selected by going to the menu and usually clicking a plus sign.

You can then either nominate a latitude and longitude or simply touch your finger on the screen to drop a “flag” icon.

If you enlarge the map, you can move the flag to an exact point.

Give the waypoint a name and you will be able to find it easily later on.

The waypoints show up as a layer over the map and you navigate yourself on the tracks and roads to those waypoints.

If you save those waypoints, you can share the file with others no matter what moving maps app they use because it is just a series of lats and longs.

Once you import a waypoint file, go to the menu and it will show waypoints as a series of flags on a moving map.

Moving map nav also allows you to record and save the tracks you have done which allows you to view and share so you can repeat the journey.

Planning a route on guidance navTomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav Peter Davis map route

GPS units allow you to plan a route using waypoints just like on a moving map by touching the screen.

But it also allows you to use POI (points of interest) or type in names of places, street names, towns, etc.

You can save the routes to favourites, my routes, etc.

However, once you have created a route, you can only share it with other riders who have the same satnav brand.

That’s because manufacturers develop unique software with features they continue to develop. They don’t want people to use their system unless buying their GPS unit.

You can export them via email, Messenger and sometimes Bluetooth or wifi, depending on the device.

They often include a smartphone app so you can plan a route on your phone or computer and then send it to your device or are it on an online community such as TomTom’s MyDrive.

How to become satnav savvyMap expert reviews TomTom Rider 550 route

The trend with most satnav software is to provide fairly limited instructions in the owner’s manual, or no manual at all.

These days you get comprehensive instructions on the internet or even in YouTube.

But studying the manual first will only get you so far.

By all means, explore the menus at home, but then get out on the road.

The only way you really get to know your satnav device, is to start using it and not worry about making mistakes.

Take your satnav device or app for a ride through an area you already know well so that if you get things wrong, you can still find your way home.

I’ve learnt more satnav quirks as I ride along, rather than from studying the manual.

Explore the settings and try changing things to see what happens.TomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav Peter Davis map route

You can also go for a ride with friends and talk to them and get their tips.

They don’t have to be using the same satnav device as you.

These days most systems are fairly similar in how they work.

So it doesn’t really matter what satnav you use.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

All you wanted to know about GPS and satnav

Satnav and mapping expert Peter (World Mapman) Davis provides some interesting background information for those riders who would like to understand how to better use their satnav unit.

There are two forms of Global Positioning System (GPS) satnav (satellite navigation): moving maps and guidance navigation.

Moving mapsTomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav Peter Davis map

This satnav is basically a “raster” or computer graphics image of an actual map.

It is geo-referenced which means the map is embedded in the satnav device and knows where its latitudes and longitudes (or lats and longs as we call them) are on the map.

These are all used in apps for phones or computer programs on desktop or laptop computers.

It shows you where you are. Your position is an overlay on the map and as you move, the map moves with you.

It’s my preferred nav in a remote area because you see details such as water holes, tanks and gradients of roads.

These systems don’t supply turn-by-turn navigation, but you can still use them to plan a route.

Guidance navigationTomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav Peter Davis map

This is turn-by-turn navigation as used in GPS satnav units from companies such as TomTom, Navman, Garmin, etc.

They use raw data collected by driving the roads, photographing them, mapping them and from satellite images.

The only map data collectors in the world are Navtecm, Teleatlas and Google. They also field-check maps and sell their data to the end users.

They collect the geographic location (lats and longs) and geo-reference images and features.

All of that data is then embedded in proprietary software that can be used on the GPS unit.

Teleatlas was bought by TomTom about 15 years ago and is not sold to any other user.

TomTom is the largest single GPS manufacturer in the world, closely followed by Garmin. But they do not have the majority of the market as there are so many models available.

Their software is set up like moving maps with similar designs for roads, rivers, and even the little position arrow.

The Hema Navigator and Mudmap are the only GPS units that include both turn-by-turn guidance and a moving map option.

Smartphone satnavTomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav Peter Davis map

Smartphones have a built-in GPS device that allows you to use moving maps via a mapping app. Just make sure you have turned on “location services”.

These don’t need a mobile signal or wifi to work, although they will provide more accurate positioning.

You can be riding in the middle of the Simpson Desert and still use your GPS to access an app with relevant maps downloaded.

Even if you are riding overseas and do not have a mobile plan for that country, the program will work.

The best and easiest to use mapping apps are Hema, Mudmap and Avenza.

Mud Map and Hema Explorer apps for iOS and Android cost $99.99 and $49.95 respectively and come with some maps.

Avenza is free, but you have to buy the maps. They get 10% commission.

Some maps are free and some start at just a few dollars.

Once you buy them, you own them, they are on your device and the GPS will place you on those maps.

By the way, other smartphone apps that use maps such as Uber and Find My Friends won’t work unless you have mobile signal or wifi.

Smartphone mapsTomTom Rider 550 GPS satnav Peter Davis map

Smartphones also have either a proprietary map (like Apple Maps) and/or Google Maps that use mobile signal and/or wifi.

Google Maps collect their own mapping data.

Apple started collecting its own data and bought some data, but didn’t do any field checking.

They introduced the service too soon and relied too much on free crowd-source data, so it was riddled with errors. They have since just bought known data, so it is now more reliable.

You can use both of these to plan a route, find where you are and source nearby points of interest.

In fact, this is how they get their funding as companies pay to be included on their maps.

Next in the series we will talk about how to plan your route.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Adding action to your motorbike photos

Motorcycles are about action, yet we rarely see any motorbikes in motion in Facebook photos.

I’m getting a bit tired of the same old photos of motorcycles in car parks or parked outside cafes.

action photos
Typical Facebook carpark photo

The proliferation of these is probably because we are too busy riding and having fun to stop and think about taking some photos of our mates riding past.

But let’s do our Facebook friends a big favour these Christmas holidays and make a pledge to get more action in our shots. Your mates will appreciate your efforts.

You don’t have to be a photographer or use an SLR camera to take good shots, either.

action photos
Photo taken with GoPro on a low tripod

I started out as a photographic journalist and have for years carried around expensive SLR cameras and lenses.

However, they are too big, expensive and fragile to cart around on a motorcycle. I’ve broken several over the years from vibration and bumps on the bike.

These days I just use an action camera or a phone. Most take fantastic idiot-proof shots.

Here are a few quick iPhone tips to snap some interesting motorcycle action photos on your next ride with friends. (Android phones should have similar functions.)

Panning shotsaction photos

Action in a photo is best shown by having some blur. This is easy.

When you next stop for a coffee/toilet break, tell your mates you will leave a couple of minutes early to station yourself on a corner or scenic outlook where you will photograph them as they go past.

Park safely off the side of the road and set yourself up somewhere with the sun behind you and a good clear shot of the road as the riders go past.

Hold the phone out about 30cm from your face so you can see the live action at the same time as what’s on your screen. This will help you follow the action.

As each rider comes into view, hit and hold the “shoot” button, careful to keep the rider in the centre of the shot as you follow them around the corner.

This will create a “burst” of photos that focus on the rider and blur the background.action photos

When you check the photos, you will see the word “Select…” at the bottom of the screen.

The main photo may be blurry and not well framed, but if you click on Select, you will see all the photos from your panning shoot.

Select the best to show your mates. They will look like MotoGP starts even if they are riding slowly!

Or you can blur the bike to show speed with a nice panorama in the background.

Simply hold the phone still as the riders go past and hold down the shoot button.

action photos
Blurred riders look fast

Scenic photos

A beautiful landscape photo looks even better with a bike in the foreground.

And it doubles the attraction if you also have a moving bike in the frame.

In this shot, I’ve positioned my bike in the foreground with a mountain in the background and a fellow rider going past.action photos

Low-down action

You can also make an action shot more dramatic if you get down low to shoot the bike.

Too many people hold the camera at eye level while standing.

action photos
Low-down action

Bikes only stand a bit over a metre tall, so at eye height, most of the bike is in the bottom half of the photo.

Get down low and you will fill the frame with motorbike.

And if you can jump an adventure bike even a few inches off the ground, it looks like a whole lot more!

Now show us some of your best motorcycle photos.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Bike SMS has second go at crowd funding

A French company which plans to produce LED signs for motorcycles and cars so riders and drivers can communicate with each other by SMS is having a second go at funding its product.

The idea is you use voice activation to dictate a written message to traffic which is displayed on an LED sign. It could be thanking them for leaving a gap, warning them of emergency braking or abusing them for cutting you off!

We announced the launch of their first Indiegogo crowd funding campaign in May 2018.

Drivers and riders obviously didn’t think much of the SMS idea because it raised just €318 (about $A491) from eight backers. The flexible goal was €32,735 (about $A50,500).

Now French company Omicron is having a second go at crowdfunding. This time, they just want $A%000 and have raised more than $1500 with almost three weeks to go.

A simple wave or finger gesture has always been enough for me, but it appears some people want more precise communication.

Dictate SMS

The MotoChat and CarChat devices use a Bluetooth microphone, universal voice recognition and an LED board that fits on a bike’s or car’s number plate.

Riders simply dictate their SMS message through the microphone to the LED board which shows seven letters, but also scrolls so you can display a longer message.

The microphone uses a different signal to normal bluetooth intercom so it won’t interfere.

There is also a three-axis gyroscope accelerometer that will detect emergency braking and automatically translate it to the LED board as a warning to drivers behind.

However, let’s hope they spell “brake” correctly and not “break” as in the video!MotoChat message warning sms

SOS function

MotoChat also includes an SOS function in the event of a crash.

The accelerometer detects lean angles of more than 67 degrees and interprets that as a crash.MotoChat message warning sms

The GPRS tracker will note the exact location and an associated app that works with any smartphone will send an SOS message with GPS location to a prerecorded number of your choice, so long as there is signal.

The person who receives the SOS can then alert emergency services at the touch of a button.

There is no subscription required for the service as there is with some other emergency tracking devices.

The European Union now requires all new cars to have a similar SOS device called eCall and it will only be a matter of time before that extends to all new motorcycles.

BMW already has an eCall function available on some of its bikes.

BMW Motorrad SOS alert button tracker message sms
BMW’s SOS button

MotoChat price

Retail price will be €90 for MotoChat and €119 for CarChat. Supporters of their Indiegogo funding campaign will be able to order them for €60 (about $A92) and €75 ($A115.75).

The only use I could see for this device is to ask road hogs to move over and let me pass. However, the driver wouldn’t see that message unless I displayed it on the front of my bike!

  • What are some of the messages you would like to send? Leave your reply in the box below.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com