In MHO, the nav system is an absolute disappointment, and totally unacceptable in a car of this class. It is the hardest to program, most counter-intuitive system I have encountered in any factory-standard system and far worse than any of the many
aftermarket systems I have used in my travels. Voice recognition is both unacceptably slow and inaccurate, and just programming the thing is riddled with inconsistencies.
Just a few of the many maddening aspects:
- If you program using Voice commands, you can confirm "State", "City" and "Street Name" much faster than answering "Yes" by simply confirming with a push of the DIS knob. However, after 3-4 minutes of programming, if you try to confirm "Street Number" by
doing the same thing, the system
RESETS to the beginning.
- If you do not know the EXACT street address you are going to, you can't get there - not even from halfway across the country. For example, I wanted to get from home in North Carolina to a destination 460 miles away in New Jersey, but because the EXACT street number of the new hotel I was going to was not in the GPS, I could not complete the programming and get ANY directions at all. On my trusty Garmin, if I know the name of the street, that's good enough - the Garmin will just suggest a few street numbers on that street and at least I can get reasonably close with confidence...
- Let's say you are sitting in your driveway and go through the whole maddening 4-5 minute process (literally, the same thing it takes me 30-60 seconds to do on a $200 Garmin unit) to program a destination - DON'T DARE PUT THE CAR IN REVERSE to back out of the driveway until you get the final voice confirmation that the street number has been "accepted" - otherwise you have to go through the whole process AGAIN. You can't even go back to "previous destinations" as a shortcut, because the info you just spent your time programming has not made it there yet...
- Add in the lousy detail displayed on anything other than the maximum zoom settings as other people in this thread have described in detail, and the fact mentioned by others that you really can't program alternate routing on the fly because as soon as you zoom out half the roads disappear. Combine this with the lack of a touch screen and you have to wonder where the money for this system went.
Considering the tremendous value proposition represented by Hyundai products in general, and this car in particular, this kind of deficiency really stands out. How can you pack so much value into such a great car and then screw up things like the Nav and Entertainment systems that people have to interact with on a constant basis? I'm hoping that since the systems are software-based, some of these glaring issues will get addressed with future updates. Obviously Hyundai is not going to retrofit our cars with touch-screens, but they can certainly revamp the software features to the point where they are not only more user-friendly but at least perform at the level that have been standard at other manufacturers for years. In the meantime, I've "dissed" my DIS and drive my otherwise beautiful car with a $200 Garmin stuck to the windshield. That solicits only a
few less questions than the Wing
emblems...
