Tags
Customer Service, Garmin, Grmin Camper 770LMT, Sat Nav, TomTom Go Live Camper & Caravan, TomTom Problems, TomTom Sat Nav
This isn’t one of my usual posts, but if you use or are thinking of a TomTom device, I’d urge you to read on…
We have used TomTom sat nav products for a number of years. I think it was early 2006 when we bought our first TomTom, a TomTom 760. After we had some questionable routing while towing in France and a number of issues with the unit simply failing to respond to commands on an early morning departure from a site in France in heavy rain in the dark. In April 2013 we ‘upgraded’ to the TomTom GoLive Camper & Caravan version to take advantage of the features this offered in navigation and database. Something that at the time was not offered on any other device. I wrote a review of the device Review of the TomTom GO LIVE Camper and Caravan Sat Nav and followed that up with an update some time later when they updated their database update platform from “MyTomTom” to “MyDrive”. This change over was not without issues and resulted in me loosing my subscriptions… which involved a lot of back and forth with their support line until I eventually got my subscriptions back. I did post an update to my review with a new conclusion… UPDATE — Review of the TomTom GO LIVE Camper and Caravan Sat Nav. Creating POI’s off line to upload was not straightforward and I followed that up with a ‘how to’…. Create accurate POI’s for your Sat-Nav…
My ‘investment’ in TomTom was not only time, but I came to realise that it was quite a substantial financial investment too. Back when I did the original reviews I commented that the ongoing costs were around £100 per year for the map, traffic and speed camera updates. It wasn’t until recently It dawned on me how TomTom try to hide this cost.
When you buy the unit, you get 12 months updates free. However at some point they have an “offer” where for a slightly reduced cost you can get and extra two map updates.. or an offer that gives you an extra few months ‘free’ for your traffic updates. What this does is move the subscription dates round so instead of paying a £100 for 12 months in one lump sum you pay £20 here and £30 there over the course of a few months. In effect hiding the real annual cost of subscriptions. So if you work it on £100 per annum from my original review the unit we have currently has actually cost £600 in subscriptions. Add that to the original purchase price of £330 thats a massive £960 “investment” and I’m not including the cost of two additional vehicle mounts and hard wiring them in!
The Final Straw…
A few weeks ago, just before we were off to Meathop Fell Caravan & Motorhome Club site near Grange-over-Sands, I went through my normal routine of firing up MyDrive to check on the number of updates pending, connecting the TomTom and performing the updates. The MyDrive (and previously MyTomTom) have never been particularly fast on either downloading updates from TomTom and in particular pushing the updates to the device. At home I’m on about a 80Mbps broadband connection and generally never have issues moving large files about either on my own network (1Gbps switched Ethernet) or to and from the internet. We have not had a Microsoft driven PC in the house for over 14 years now, but I do have a number of Mac devices to hand. I digress.
I had a new map update pending and the usual cameras and other bits. The map update used to take about 20 minutes to download and around 45 to 50 to push to the device. I left it all connected and waited patently. No more updates pending, I checked the GPS unit and all seemed well, disconnected the Mac (yes I did do it correctly) and all still seemed well. Check the entry for Meathop Fell to get an idea of expected travel time and it worked fine. So I switched it off.
Couple of days later Sue was going somewhere and telephone me to say the GPS isn’t working. When she returned home I fired up the TomTom… got the usual splash screen picture of the motorhome on the road….… And waited…… and waited a bit more….. Finally….. black screen with the TomTom logo up the left hand side. “Ah” I thought “It has done a full shutdown” so I waited… and behold the splash screen with the motorhome appeared. “Sorted!” thought I. Wrong was I! Back to the black screen with TomTom up the left hand side followed a few seconds later with the splash screen… and it just kept on with this cycle. Oh bugger.
There is a way of doing a hard reset… turn on the unit and continue holding the power button down and clicking it three times, wait for the spinning cog and connect to a computer running logged in MyDrive… did that too. Best ‘consult’ Google at this point.
Googling “TomTom keeps resetting” brought up the usual links. However one caught my eye…. On the TomTom help forum dated a few days ago… clicked on it. Yo… other people having the same issues with the camper version after the last map update. Now for copyright reasons I can’t post any screen shots from the forum (I do have them) but there were a number of people with a similar issue to me. There were the usual “Try taking it to the southern hemisphere and turning it on there that cured my problem” type replies and a couple that basically said try the same as I’d already tried.
Initial contact with ‘Help Desk’ was…. “you need a new one” which kind of pee’d me off somewhat and so I tweeted and got a reply…..

Now that reply from TomTom is intriguing. They must have known there was an issue as ‘HelpDesk’ first response was “You need to buy a new one” and that means they must have been primed with that answer. A point that might indicate this is the fact in the tweeted reply they say serial numbers starting ST are supported but others are not. Also the final bit “…. which is why support offered a new one.” is wrong…. they said I have to BUY a new one.

At this point TomTom asked me to DM them with a serial number. Which I did.

… and here is their reply (obviously rating forth bottom tweet upwards)…


It was at this point TomTom went quiet on the Twitter front. So I Asked a Question on their web site…. here is the exchange in full. (click on the image to open in a new window if you can’t zoom in to read).
All the way through this there was no hint of “We acknowledge there may be a problem and are looking into it”. I suspect they know there is an issue and are seeing it as an opportunity to sell some more units and make money from continued subscriptions for their services. It is painfully obvious that I’ll not see a refund for the residual of my pre-paid subscriptions (around £70 or £80 in my estimation) or much hope for any other user that has been affected. I counted around ten people on one post in the forum that were reporting issues. Also at no point was any indication of how much the “discount” on a new unit would be. Plus as the discount would probably be applied to their list price, not the price the unit was generally available for from some on-line stores I suspect it would not be a good deal anyhow.
Why Garmin?
Basically as i understand it there are two other players in this market, Snooper and Garmin. Avetex have a rebadged Garmin. The Snooper I discounted a while ago as back then you could not upload your own POI’s and they didn’t have an update service via a Mac, only a Microsoft PC. This may have changed, but I decided to go for Garmin.
My association with Garmin goes back several years… intact to around 1996 when I bought a hugely expensive (for the time) Garmin 92. The 92 was one of the first hand held aviation GPS units you could clamp to the aircrafts yoke and it came with a database of all the VOR’s, NDB’s, TACAN’s and ground obstacles along with restricted airspace. all displayed on a 2 wide by 3 inch high monochrome LCD display. From that point I’ve always had Garmin GPS in every aircraft I flew and relied on them for RNAV approaches into airports in minimal weather conditions.
The Garmin system in the Bonanza….. and below the same system showing us flying East (090) from Magadan in Russia to Nome, Alaska approaching the international date line…

So, I’ve got around 23 years experience of Garmin’s aviation navigation products, time to try their earth based stuff!
Looking forward…
I ordered a Garmin Camper 770LMT-D 6.95 inch sat nav with Full Europe Lifetime Maps, Free Lifetime Digital Traffic, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi for £255.27 from Amazon yesterday. Todays Saturday and it’s due to arrive Monday morning. I look forward to testing it out and giving it a bit of a review. I have already downloaded Garmin Basecamp and got the hang of creating way points… really easy in fact. DOn’t quite know the upload to the device process yet!
For those that follow @CaravanChron on Twitter… you may remember that I was offered a Garmin unit by a company to try. Well, I declined. One of the reasons being is I don’t generally like doing reviews or recommendations based on a loaned bit of kit. If I say “yea.. I like it I’d recommend it” and it subsequently turned out to be not as promised, then I’d feel like I’d done you a disservice. If I buy something and say I like it and would recommend it and it turns out to be crap, well I’m in the same boat as you… we both paid for it and we both got stung.
Epilogue
Just as a final ending to this, if perchance TomTom do sacrifice some small fluffy animal and decide the Gods will smile on them again if they sort out my GPS or even offer a refund, as it is now a point of principle with me about failed customer service, Sue and I agreed any refund will be donated to our local Cat Charity.
I’m sure Oscar and Henry would approve….

Foot Note
What do I think is wrong. Well I guess in either the map database update or in some additional packet of code that was uploaded designed to update the operating system (OS) of the device [firmware] there was a corruption or error. What is happening with my device (and I can only speak for my device as I’ve not had hands on with any other) is during boot up it is failing some internal OS checksum… which results in a reboot. However it’s now in a loop. This happens before any port is enabled the would allow data transfer. Most system designers build in right at the start of the boot up process a piece of code that states if some ‘condition’ (I.E if this button is held down on start up, boot from external port only) is met. This allows a device to be accessed if it falls into the startup loop. Maybe TomTom have a way of directly connecting at a board level or a number of key presses that allow this interruption to the boot process, but alas I don’t know them. So now it is caught in a loop before any eternal communication from MyDrive can take place and stopped any chance of downloading new firmware or firmware patch.
I had the same problem with a TomTom where a firmware upgrade caused it to be unable to find any satellites. I am very familiar with Garmin from the marine world, and we have a Garmin car GPS as well. We placed the side by side a little distance apart, and the Garmin found the satellites instantly. I contacted TomTom to get a solution on how to install the previous firmware version which worked perfectly, but got the same reply: Your device is outdated, upgrade by buying a new one. he device was just over 2 yeas old, and scrapping it would also mean scrapping all your collected routes and places. I bought a new one – a Garmin. Later I searched the net for the problem, which was very common. I don’t say it is deliberate that a firmware upgrade just after the guarantee lapses is deliberate, but it is easy the get that idea.
We had the same issue with our TomTom, but found a person at https://www.tomtomrepairteam.co.uk/ who repaired the Satnav for £25. No more issues.
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We have requested a refund on the Go Camping version and it has been accepted. In the meantime we will continue to use the original old Camping and Caravan 1005 version which is user friendly. However no doubt we will need to upgrade in the near future so will be looking around.
An update and now seriously considering a Garmin. We bought the new TomTom Go Camping in April 2019. It is the worst TomTom unit we have ever had to use and is not user friendly like the previous model Camping and Caravanning 1005 version. On delivery we had to update it straight away. Within a few days of receiving the new unit in April it locked up after just one trip. On contacting the supplier I had to do a reset to get it working again. To do the reset I had to hold down the button for over a minute.
On our most recent trip it worked fine for a couple of days and then one morning refused to work even after trying to do a reset. Of course this was the morning with the caravan on the back going to a new destination. I had to use the “in car sat nav” which is not geared for a caravan being towed. Eventually I got it working again. The next trick was for the voice to disappear and the only way to get it back was to go to “Voices” select another one and then you had voice.
Although set to “Car with caravan” and all dimensions for caravan inputted, it took us down an unsuitable road on the way to a CL. On setting it back to “car” and trying the same route again without the caravan it took the correct route using a decent road and other trips back to the caravan site without the caravan. Tried it again in “Car with caravan” setting and it avoided the unsuitable road in question? Voice still disappears.
Another issue is that you cannot change or adjust destination while moving and have to come to a complete stop which is a hassle especially when it is the passenger is setting up the unit and you are on a motorway!
Lastly at the bottom there is normally a banner showing the speed restriction and your speed even when no destination has been inputted. This banner now only comes up on occasions.
We are very disappointed in this version of the TomTom Go camping which we only bought because TT told us that our old Go Camping 1005 unit could not be fixed. We have since had it fixed at a cost of under £25!
Hi Ian
Sorry to hear you are having issues. I have had a couple of other readers contact me via email to say they ‘upgraded’ to this later model after their earlier unit stopped working post the “infamous software update”. They are also reporting similar issues to you and as of yet had no support from TomTom.
Pretty poor show from a major company if you ask me.
I borrowed a friend’s Garmin and used it for about two journeys. That put me off Garmin for life as it tried to take us down some weird and wonderful roads plus not really user friendly. No interest in Snooper as you cannot upload your own POIs.
However to get back to the issue with the TomTom 1005 Camper and Caravan unit. We downloaded the update in late March 2019 and since then it has not worked at all. I have taken advice from some foreigner over the phone at TomTom and also off the Internet, but no resolution except that we need to buy a new unit. The TomTom Camper and Caravan with lifetime maps cost us over £400 in late 2014 and is not even 5 years old.
Now here is the interesting part. The unit was purchased under the old Sale of Goods Act which still applies however we have been paying annually for the “Live services” so the latter will be covered by the Consumer Rights Act 2015 and you should be able to claim back some of that money. In addition even though the update was free it should be covered by the Consumer Rights Act 2015 however how do you go about claiming as you have suffered a loss due to the update?
I am a member of Which Legal Services and have written to them for advice as they have offered very good advice in the past. I am also considering writing to the BBC Watchdog but a lone complaint will probably be ignored. However if several or more people write in then maybe Watchdog will take not.
There are also numerous complaints about these units failing on the https://www.pocketgpsworld.com/
In the meantime we had no choice except to purchase the new TomTom Go Camper at a cost of £300 on Amazon. Just as well because if we used the vehicles inbuilt Satnav which does not recognise the dimensions of the caravan we may have been in serious trouble on the way to Coftons in Devon.
I have had many many Tomtoms and can say in all honesty they have never let me down whilst under guarantee.
I will be very interested in any type of devise that understands I drive a large transit van whilst working but a car and caravan for leisure.
I have seen adverts in the caravan magazine but never seen an in-depth review.
I await with bated breath
its possible i suppose to keep ahead of the competition , their latest camper model looks the business but i wont be tempted .
hi simon, ive been through the same with my two 1005 camper and caravan devices,i had even sent my first device away to a repair shop and it came back with no sound or speed cameras and it turned itself off on occasion. it would seem that mydrive connect wants to corrupt the device in order for you to take up the offer of a new unit ‘ as they are very quick to offer discount on a new device instead of trying to fix what you want fixed. tomtom have shown no regard for customer loyality and i will probably go with the garmin as well.
Hi Mark
I’m beginning to wonder if they are about to launch a new model?
As i own a Snooper S7000 7 inch Ventura which I purchased while while I owned a PC.
I made a decision to buy a Mac for photographic work and accepted that I was sacrificing map updates. Until last week that was the case and my maps were getting wildly out of date( sometimes the unit tried to get me to jump onto a road where there was a bridge now) so I started looking at the internet for a replacement. While browsing I noticed that I could purchase an SD card map for the trucker version of my satnav for £95 and thought “ what if? “ so I ordered one over the internet. Next day I recieved a call from Snooper customer services querying why as I had Lifetime mapping, I told the lady the situation with my Mac and non compatability and what I was trying to do. The ladies answer was and I quote, we will cancel and refund your £95 and charge you £9.65 for a new SD card with updated maps. That solution is available anytime you want to update.
Now that is what I call great service.
Yours Aye
Hi Michael
That is GREAT customer service!!!
TomTom’s software approval/testing processes have always been abysmal in my experience and like you I’ve had issues in the past. I’m still a TomTom customer as my current GO510 has lifetime updates but as you might expect from TomTom they decide the definition of ‘lifetime’ which is neither mine or the devices lifetime.
Hi Brian
I tend to agree with you on that.
Simon, I also have a Garmin Camper 660LMT-D. You’ll be pleased to know that updates have never been a problem for me. I would be interested to hear how you gat on with the ability to set it ‘Towing’ as opposed to solo. I have not been able to detect that this setting makes any difference whatever, as the unit persists in selecting unsuitable roads. I know this as it selects roads around my house that are completely inappropriate.
I contacted Garnin about this and their suggestion was to enlarge the outfit sizes to HGV proportions!. But no change…
Hi Chris
I’ll look out for that, thanks. One of my ‘tests’ is a rout that would normally take me up Sutton Bank in Yorkshire.