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.
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. new tomtom rider 600
Unlike the old Rider 550, which required a USB cable and a computer, the 600 has a . You connect your phone via the TomTom MyDrive app (which has been completely redesigned), and syncing a route from Komoot or Rever takes about 15 seconds. If you ride a Harley or Triumph with
You only commute in a straight line (use your phone). You are on a tight budget (look for a used Rider 550). Or you only ride within 50 miles of home and know the roads by heart. Final Verdict (Score: 8.5/10) The new TomTom Rider 600 is the best purely motorcycle-focused navigator for paved roads and light gravel. The magnetic mount is a revolution in usability. The Thrill Seek algorithm is genuinely fun—it has taken me down roads I never would have found on my own. It is genius
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.
However, the true star is mode. You tell the device how "twisty" you want the road to be (Level 1 to Level 5). At Level 5, the GPS actively tries to route you away from straight roads. It will take a 4-hour journey and turn it into a 6-hour journey of pure corners. In my testing, Level 3 was the sweet spot—it kept me moving but still removed the boring sections. Off-Road and Adventure Features TomTom is clearly chasing the Garmin Tread and Zumo XT customers here. The Rider 600 comes pre-loaded with thousands of recorded off-road tracks and the ability to import GPX files effortlessly via WiFi.