KIWI RIDER AUGUST 2020 VOL.1 | Page 29

connected, can change their riding order, leave and come back to the network and the DMC system automatically re-negotiates the connection and reworks the order. Dynamic Mesh isn’t the only place where the Cardo R&D team has changed the game. Cardo units are the only ones with an IP67 rating, so they’re pretty much waterproof. This allows them to be used in any conditions – so are suitable for road riding, dirt, trials, and even motocross. I tested this out on a recent road-trip. Leaving Wellington bathed in sunshine, I headed up SH1 to Taihape, then took the Gentle Annie towards Hastings. As I got to the top of the Annie, it was thick cloud and then heavy rain, which soaked through my riding gear in short order. After a quick lunch I carried on South towards Wellington, where it only dried out at Masterton. The Packtalk Bold attached to my HJC i70 endured around seven hours of driving rain, and temperatures in the single digits. It kept pumping out the tunes and had me in contact with my riding buddy the whole way. I was very impressed, not only with the waterproofing, but the battery life was more than enough for two full days of riding without a charge. OPTIONS Cardo has a fairly wide range of communicators, with tiered price points, meaning most riders can get into the Cardo ecosystem. If you’re a solo rider, the Freedom 1+ might be the device for you, allowing Bluetooth mobile phone Bluetooth and music streaming. If you have aspirations to ride with friends, then the Freedom 2+ is the way to go. Further up the line the Freecom 4+ allows 4 riders to connect, listen to their own music and use voice to control the unit. At the top of the range are the Packtalk Slim and Packtalk Bold. Both are essentially the same, using both Bluetooth and DMC, they’re able to connect with other brands of Bluetooth communicator and act as a bridge between the mesh network and the outsider Bluetooth unit. They can connect to two Bluetooth accessories at once, one would be your phone and the other could be your GPS. These are equipped with quality JBL speakers, which are nice and slim to be able to fit behind the cheek pads of most helmets. The connection from the speakers to the control unit is a simple headphone jack, so you could use your own ear buds if you wanted. In the box there are different options for mounting, including a stick-on mount, a clip-on mount, a boom mic, a fixed sticky-mounted mic, and a stack of foam pads to get the speakers near your ears. The difference between the Bold and the Slim units is that the Bold is one control unit/battery, whereas the Slim is two units – a slim control unit for the side of your helmet and a battery pack that mounts to the back of the helmet. The benefits of the Slim may be to move the battery mass to the centre of the helmet, and less wind resistance on the side of your helmet. I’ve not noticed any drag to one side or the other with the larger Bold unit. CONNECTIVITY Another couple of features of the Packtalk units are the ability to control setup and connections via a mobile phone app (simply connect the phone, download the app and you’re able to control the unit, no need to remember combinations of buttons) and they also have voice control. Voice commands include finding out the battery status, volume up and down, and even activating Siri. Make sure you change the unit’s language from English American to English UK. Otherwise to get the voice commands to work properly you need to put on a false American accent to make it work. One more feature I liked was way it automatically increases the volume of whatever you’re listening to so you can hear it over the wind noise as your speed increases. KIWI RIDER 29