Buy Cheap Pioneer AVIC-X910BT 5.8-Inch In-Dash Navigation A/V Receiver with DVD Playback and Bluetooth


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Pioneer Avic-X910Bt 5.8-Inch In-Dash Navigation A/V Receiver With Dvd Playback & Bluetooth
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Technical Details

- AM/FM radio, DVD, DVD-R/RW, DVD+R/RW, CD, CD-R/RW, MP3/WMA/WAV/AAC, DivX/MPEG4 receiver with GPS navigation and MSN Direct
- 4 x 50 Watts maximum power with front/rear and three sets of preamp outputs
- 5.8-inch widescreen TFT LCD touchscreen with 800 x 480 resolution
- Includes auxiliary input, USB port, SD card slot, iPod direct control; add optional tuners for SAT/HD radio
- On-board Bluetooth for hands-free calls, on-screen dialing and more
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Customer Buzz
 "SLOW, poor nav graphics, laggy in all functions" 2010-08-18
By K. S. Goh (Bukit Timah, Singapore)
I bought this unit because I needed a nav unit to replace my Tomtom with traffic. Sad to say, the Pioneer never came close. I had Bluetooth in my factory stereo, the Pioneer unit improved on it with a nice display, but lost out in sound quality.



My Tomtom's graphics is nice and even offers Advance Lane Guidance (Garmin calls it Junction View). The Pioneer does not.



My free Tomtom FM RDS-TMC traffic updates quite quickly and recalculates my route and shows me traffic on route on the right side of the screen.. The Pioneer has MSN Direct traffic but I often found myself driving STRAIGHT INTO traffic, even if the unit KNOWS there is a jam on route. It doesn't show you traffic until you are in it!



I bypassed the unit to allow GPS inputs on the fly. Even so, the screen taps can be so laggy that it almost gets frozen and extremely frustrating. When it starts lagging, EVERYTHING lags, including phone calls. Incoming calls can't be answered. Outgoing calls are connected at the phone, but no audio comes in through the unit. This can be DANGEROUS as you are distracted by trying to answer the phone manually. I sometimes feel like punching the screen in!



I sent the unit back to Pioneer for service with the complaint of slow response, but it came back as "no problems found".



I finally sold it on eBay and put my TomTom back in my car with my factory stereo.



Lost about $400. Now even though Amazon is having what seems like a killer deal on the newer X920BT, I'm not touching it! The new unit now needs a separately purchased traffic receiver for MSN Direct which will terminate it's services anyway by Jan 2012. And their nav graphics is identical to this unit... So no go for me.

Customer Buzz
 "Great product!" 2010-07-25
By Father_of_3 (Charlotte, NC)
Overall a very good Navigation Receiver and looks really nice at night. Basic navigation works good. Touch screen is very responsive. DVD playback is nice and the sound quality is great.

The only negative I can find is the start-up time is slower than some other navigation radios. From time to time the EQ button disappears from the touch screen but comes back after rebooting. Screen doesn't tilt and is not clearly visible on sunny days.

Customer Buzz
 "pioneer customer service BAD" 2010-06-14
By Michael D. Conner (hillsboro, or United States)
I bought this unit in March and called Pioneer customer service several times now and they are either not informed about the product or just lying to me to run the warranty past its limit..The clock on the unit due to a software problem displays the wrong time. I have called customer service and they kept telling me that the engineers were working on it..that is until last time. This tech must not be a happy employee because he really treated me like I was a pain in the you know what. The maps on the display are pretty lean on info. The graphics are washed out and boring. Also if you add the sirius radio option good luck on guessing what your presets are as it does not display the info, It just says preset 1,2, etc. Also you will be half way to wherever you are going before the unit is fully booted up.It can take anywhere from 2 minutes to 6 minutes for the unit to be fully operational on start up. About one out of every 10 times the unit will also hang on boot up so if you want to listen to music or see where you are, you had better find a parking lot so you can shut your car off and restart it.



When the unit works, it works almost satisfactorily, but its always a crap shoot and if you want to know what time it is you had better be wearing a watch because the clock is not correct and apparently Pioneer doesn't know how to fix it. On the plus side the sound quality is really quite good. You may be better off buying just a stereo and a portable GPS. I had a lowrance portable gps that was far superior to this and it was 3 years old. Good luck if you buy it and it doesn't work getting pioneer to do anything about it! I think they are selling them with defective software so when the map upgrade comes out they can put the fix in the new maps and charge you! Having purchased Pioneer products in the past I was expecting a better product than this! Quite disappointing

Customer Buzz
 "Not so super tuner" 2010-05-30
By Em (Seattle, Wa United States)
I bought this deck and have spent 3 trips to the installer changing converters and the antenna. They even tried to add on the HD radio instead. It's pretty bad when the stock Mercedes stereo delivered a basic service like FM than the Pioneer. If FM is a consideration for you i would suggest getting another manufacture's system.

Customer Buzz
 "Better than the stock radio" 2010-04-30
By John S. Dean (Sturtevant, WI United States)
I have a new smart fortwo convertible, and so couldn't realistically use my windshield mounted Garmin anymore since the windshield is so far forward, out of reach. I do a lot of running to unfamiliar areas for work, and definitely wanted GPS in the new car. Dug around and was looking at the Kenwood units and the Pioneers, and the features made me pick the Pioneer.

Removal of the old one was a piece of cake, and the wiring harness adapter I got for my car made the wiring for this very easy, but there are so many cables needed for things, the microphone, the GPS, the AV cables for the Ipod, and of course they all have to be 15 feet long in case you are locating things far away. And none of them can be cut to be shortened without possibly impairing functionality. So there's all this extra wiring that you have to wind up and find a place to store where your feet won't knock it or pull it out again.

Other than that, once it was in place, it worked well. It takes a bit to boot, but fortunately the last audio source you had playing will start up within a few seconds of starting your car, so at least you have whatever you had been listening to playing again while you wait for the ability to navigate the touchscreen.

GPS was accurate, but I pretty much expected that on anything purchased at this point in time.

My unit came with the newest firmware, so the response of the display and controls is quite good. I do have an issue with the calibration so will have to try to recalibrate it again since sometimes it takes a couple pushes to get the control to read my input. Could just be the angle I'm sitting at so I'll adjust the calibration some and see if that helps.

There's a choice of I think 6 or 8 colors for the LED's for the buttons and such to be changed to, so that's a nice feature.

Volume is a bit frustrating though, since it has such a large range of numbers to go through (haven't dialed it up past 60 or so yet, so don't know but could go all the way to 100) so changing volume levels takes more spinning of the control than I'd care for. I don't need THAT much granularity in my volume levels, would have preferred something that went maybe just 0 to 30 or 40 so it didn't take so many revolutions to go from top down at highway speeds to off the highway levels that won't annoy everyone around me... That's my biggest complaint about the unit.

DVD playback is easy, but screen was a little disappointing for clarity, but it's not a very high resolution so not a surprise there.

Ipod navigation works well, but the album art display is considerably smaller than one would expect they could do on a screen this size. But after having used the integration I had on my 2010 Kia Soul that I just traded in, it's lightyears better. On the Kia, I'd have to keep spinning the selector knob to scroll through artists, and when you have a couple thousand artists, it just got too frustrating to move from someone at the other end of the alphabet. This gives you an initial letter selection, so you can quickly jump to the letter the name would start with, then select it, and have it present you then with all those artists, with an easy to navigate up/down slider to scroll through the names. This will make my music listening MUCH more enjoyable than it was in the Soul since now I'll actually be able to play what I want, when I want it. In the Soul, I usually just let it play all random since that was less frustrating than trying to spin that little knob hundreds of revolutions.

Someone in another forum complained about the knob, and I was a little leery about it, but it works well, I've had no incorrect inputs by accidentally pushing it in or side to side / up or down. It *IS* shorter than they should have made it though, so grasping it is a little tougher than it probably needed to be, as it's so close to the flush face of the unit. It has detent positions so you feel it clicking as you rotate it.

My phone (Verizon Imagio) paired up with it instantly, no muss, no fuss. Address books downloaded, and showed me it was time to clean up my address book since I had multiple numbers for some things, and they show up kind of obscurely then. For example, I had a main number for my office, then secondary and tertiary numbers for if our internet is down (use VOIP) and I need to dial a hard line. So I had multiple entries for "office" but no way to know which was which number, as the moment you push one, it starts to dial. That could've been better planned out.

Have yet to use the voice control, will edit this when I do to comment on that.

All in all, a good unit though, the few minor irritations I have are far less impacting to me than what I was using in the Kia, so I'm a happy customer.


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