While there isn't a dedicated "TomTom Rider 600" yet—as the remains the flagship motorcycle unit—the TomTom GO 600 is a well-known 6-inch car GPS.
| Feature | New TomTom Rider 600 | Garmin Zumo XT2 | Smartphone (iPhone/Android) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Screen Size | 6-inch | 5.5-inch | Varies (6.1-6.9) | | Glove Operation | Excellent (Physical buttons) | Excellent | Poor to None | | Waterproof | IPX7 (Submersible) | IPX7 | No (Needs expensive case) | | Vibration Damage | Zero risk (Built for it) | Zero risk | High risk (Camera OIS failure) | | Offline Maps | Full pre-loaded global | Full pre-loaded | Limited (Downloadable) | | Price | ~$499 / €549 | ~$599 / €649 | N/A (Already owned) | new tomtom rider 600
The unboxing experience is surprisingly premium. TomTom has moved away from the bulky, rugged plastic of the old 550 model to a sleeker, more industrial design. Inside the box, you get: While there isn't a dedicated "TomTom Rider 600"
Biker-Specific POIs: Pre-loaded with over 1,000 points of interest tailored to motorcyclists, including biker-friendly hotels, museums, and meeting spots. Connectivity and Safety Simplify Ride Planning With TomTom's New Rider 550 GPS Smartphone | Feature | New TomTom Rider 600
Thrill Seeking: Includes "Plan a Thrill" and "Winding Roads" options to find the most exciting routes rather than just the fastest ones.
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.
New Tomtom Rider 600 [top] File
Other forms:
This form will automatically draw your GPS data (or KML/KMZ file, or plain text data in CSV or tab-delimited format) overlaid upon a variety of background maps and imagery, using either the Google Maps API or Leaflet, an open-source mapping library. Please note that creating a map with a very large number of waypoints (or very long tracklogs, especially if speed or altitude colorization is enabled) can cause your Web browser to grind to a halt. If you have thousands of markers, Google Earth might be a better choice. If you don't have GPS data and want to interactively draw on a map, use GPS Visualizer's "sandbox" to create your own GPX or KML file. |