MRA Navigation vs MRA Gold
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I have been reviewing both of the apps and I am trying to decide which one is better for me.
I am looking for feedback from other users that are using them.
Would it be possible to try each app for a week or two in order to help with a decision on which one to sign up for.Thanks in advance for the feedback.
Mike
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@Mike-56 It’s great that you’re thinking of subscribing, but the two MRA products are completely different. MRA RoutePlanner Gold is a top notch route planner, used for creating routes for navigation devices and is usually accessed via the website.
MyRoute-app (the phone app) is a free app to download to which you can subscribe to the navigation module allowing you to navigate with turn by turn instructions. -
@Nick-Carthew said in MRA Navigation vs MRA Gold:
It’s great that you’re thinking of subscribing, but the two MRA products are completely different.
yes they are, but they are like two sides of a coin and belong together. I can only recommend you to take a lifelong subscription to both of them... once you have some experience with them you will be hooked for life anyway
The planner allows you to organise your trips up until month long holidays
The navigation app guides you while ridingNavigation has just received a huge update, and the planner will be next
Sorry for sounding like a fanboy but when it is good, it is good
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@Mike-56, it depends entirely on what you want to do. If you want a navigation app on your phone, well you need navigation. If you want to plan your own routes, you can choose between the free, the Silver or the Gold subscription. Two seperate things that are complementary. Goed to know is that, if you only want to drive other peoples routes through the navigation app, you get the Here map, even in your free subscription.
Navigation has a two week free trial of the fully functional product.
https://mranavigationnext.app/ -
The giveaway is in the name :
- MRA RoutePlanner is planning
- MRA Navigation is live navigation - as in a satnav replacement app for smartphones
The route planner generates routes for any standard satnav (and also for the MRA Navigation app), but if you want to avoid buying satnav hardware then consider MRA Navigation.
You just need a decent smartphone - say less than 4 years old or so.Whilst using the MRA Navigation app there can be some confusion (from a new users point of view) as to which app/program you're using because it has hooks back to the RoutePlanner program to integrate the route selection/downloading - but RoutePlanner is still a separate app/program.
Is MRA Navigation as good as a pro satnav? Right now - not quite, but considering it's only been live for a month it's pretty close - closer than you might expect.
Sorry for sounding like a fanboy but when it is good, it is good
I'm definitely a fanboi for RoutePlanner, and getting close to fanboi level for Navigation. And mostly very happy not to have to buy a satnav.
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Is MRA Navigation as good as a pro satnav?
I find this a funny/interesting remark.
But what is a "pro-satnav"?
(this is absolutely not meant to be critical!!) -
@Jack-van-Tilburg said in MRA Navigation vs MRA Gold:
(this is absolutely not meant to be critical!!)
I for sure think Navigation Next takes a lot of hassle away from the use of a dedicated satnav. In all honesty I think these units have their quirks and bugs too. https://forum.gps.nl/ is full of them.
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@Jack-van-Tilburg said in MRA Navigation vs MRA Gold:
Is MRA Navigation as good as a pro satnav?
I find this a funny/interesting remark.
Ah! - I didn't want to try and specify any since I've never bought a satnav, but Garmin & TomTom immediately come to mind as the two devices that all my mates use.
As Con suggests, they curse them regularly, so why spend money on a dedicated computer when there's already one in your pocket that's generally more capable.
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@Con-Hennekens, @richtea999
My first nav was a Garmin Streetpilot 2610.
We are now almost 20 years later.
If I now compare the introduction of new SatNav devices with the introduction of Next, I see absolutely no reason to purchase a navigation product with dedicated hardware.
And thanks to the platform chosen for Next, improved functionality and/or bug fixes can be rolled out much more quickly. -
@Jack-van-Tilburg I am sorry to say but there is a reason for a separate GPS:
The MRA navigation has up to now no coloured streets. Which is a no-go for me. Colour for different types of streets gives much more orientation where you are and enhances the readability in sunlight.
I like the route planner very much but for the time being for navigation on the road I still use my zumo XT (together with Garmin Drive). -
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@Jack-van-Tilburg But not when navigating using the Navigation Module. 🤭
The basic HERE colormap that the nav module uses now is simply too basic. Improvements have already been announced.
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@StefanHummelink
Okay, een beetje kort door de bocht van mij dus. -
@Jack-van-Tilburg Wel heeeeel erg mooie bochtjes. ️
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@Klaus-r said in MRA Navigation vs MRA Gold:
The MRA navigation has up to now no coloured streets. Which is a no-go for me.
Map overlays are in the works (but don't ask for ETA )
I actually think there are 2 reasons in favor of dedicated satnavs:- they come with a decent powered and fully integrated mount
- they are not considered antique after just a few years
Who would have thought I would turn against my own arguing
But it is what it is. I'll be happy to spend € 250 every 4 or 5 years on a new rugged Android if needed, instead of € 800 every 6 or 7 years@Jack-van-Tilburg said in MRA Navigation vs MRA Gold:
I see colours
You are cheating!
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@Con-Hennekens said in MRA Navigation vs MRA Gold:
You are cheating!
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Thanks everyone for the responses. I will try the 14 free trial for the navigation and then go from there.
I am using the free app now and find it to be one of the better route apps on the market.Keep up the good work.
Mike
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@Con-Hennekens said in MRA Navigation vs MRA Gold:
they are not considered antique after just a few years
The satnavs that Garmin and TomTom produce are antique before they get announced!
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@Matt-Flaming, yes indeed , but you can still use them ten years later. I don't see that happening a lot with smartphones.
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@Con-Hennekens said in MRA Navigation vs MRA Gold:
@Matt-Flaming, yes indeed , but you can still use them ten years later. I don't see that happening a lot with smartphones.
Agreed that smartphones are currently good for 5 years tops - for most people probably it's closer to 3 or 4, and then pass it on / trade it in.
But few points:
- the size and quality of your dedicated 5" satnav screen from 5 years ago is really going to annoy you for the final 5 of those 10 years
- whereas I can run MRA on an iPhone, a Samsung, a OnePlus. A 6" screen, 7" even - and I get to choose, not Garmin or TomTom designers
- you'll still to have buy a phone every 5 years anyway!
In terms of suitability, most modern mid-priced smartphones are waterproof enough not to need a special case, they can be charged off the vehicle battery with a 15€ USB adapter, and Quad Lock or equivalent solves any mounting problems. You may need to buy touch-sensitive gloves though, or use BarButtons.
I am pretty sure it's the future. MRA have bet on it, after all.