Review: Going all wireless in the car with the Nokia CR-200 Wireless Charging Car Holder & Kinivo BTC450 Bluetooth car kit
Posted: October 14, 2013 Filed under: Cars, Technology 3 CommentsIt’s official: I love wireless. Ever since I got my Nokia Lumia 920 and the accompanying wireless charge plate I can’t imagine going back to a world where I have to plug my phone in to charge it. The convenience of being able to simply place my phone on the bench or stand it in a stand and have it instantly start charging is a joy.
This had worked great when I was at home or at work where I have the Nokia Wireless Charging Plate and Nokia Wireless Charging Stand respectively, but not much help for the >1 hour I spend in the car each day commuting to and from work. (Truth is David Fowler has the wireless charging stand at work, but we share an office, so I get the benefit of his late arrival hours each day 😉
Car + cables = sadness
Until recently I had being using a USB cable and 3.5mm audio cable (below) to manually hook up the phone to my car for charging (via USB) and audio so I could listen to podcasts, music and what not. My car has integrated Bluetooth for call/answering. But wires are a drag (fiddly to connect/disconnect), and the phone had to sit in landscape orientation in the open ashtray which was a little awkward. It would occasionally slide out of its home and on more than one occasion, a passenger would get themselves caught on the cabling and hilarity would ensue.
An idea is planted
It was while listening to a podcast that I discovered the Nokia CR-200 Wireless Charging Car Holder. Andrew Coates had remarked he’d recently picked one of these up and was loving the convenience it offered in the car. I took a mental note and later attempted to look up details of this kit online, but to my dismay I couldn’t find any details about its availability in the USA (Andrew is in Australia). Turns out, it isn’t officially available in the USA. That link above is to Nokia’s global accessories page, but you won’t find the CR-200 available in retail stores in the USA or on Nokia’s US site. I asked @NokiaUS why and they pointed me to Amazon.
I still have no idea why the CR-200 isn’t marketed in the USA, but hey, at least we can get it on Amazon. Note, there are actually two items listed on Amazon, one is cheaper and eligible for Amazon Prime, but it lists delivery time as 3-5 weeks. So I ended up going with this listing instead. In the end it took a few weeks to arrive anyway, as it’s shipped out of the UK, so I probably would’ve been better off with the Prime eligible listing in the first place. Live and learn.
That was set to take care of mounting the phone and getting wireless charging but I still needed to solve the wireless audio problem (remember my car already has Bluetooth phone pairing for calls and I want to keep using it for that purpose as the integration into the car system is great). I trawled through the Amazon listings and reviews for the various Bluetooth car audio adapters and landed on the Kinivo BTC450.
The installation
Both kits come with everything you need to install them in your car. Finding a suitable position for them of course is a little tricky depending on the layout of your car. Both kits require a 12-volt car outlet each for power. In my case the positions for each unit were fairly natural: above and to the right of the transmission selector for the CR-200, and next to the iDrive controller for the BTC450. I have a power outlet in the ashtray above the transmission selector and in the center console bin behind the iDrive controller, which also happens to be where the 3.5mm aux in audio connector is. Perfect.
Both kits also come with sticky pads to mount them to the car interior. The 3M sticky pads that came with the BTC450 are excellent, very sticky indeed. The CR-200 however comes with a separate mounting plate which is backed with a thick, soft sticky substance. Once this is attached to the car, the holder itself has a very tacky suction cup (with an actual suction lever to ensure a tight fit to the mounting plate). This is where I started to have trouble.
The sticky goo on the back of the CR-200 mounting plate just wasn’t sticky enough to get a good attachment to the thin strip of coated timber laminate in my desired mount location. As such, I’d get back into the car after being in work all day and find the whole unit in the passenger foot well. Urgh. This is not what I wanted at all. I contemplated a few mods to the kit to stable up the install until I remembered the BTC450 came with *two* of those super sticky 3M double-sided pads. Perfect, as only one was needed for the BTC450 itself. I gently pried the sticky gel off the bottom of the CR-200 mounting plate, and successfully used the spare 3M sticky pad to mount it in the desired location. It hasn’t moved since.
Once everything was plugged in the pairing process was trivial. The BTC450 automatically enters pairing mode when it receives power the first time, and from there it’s simply a case of using the phone’s Bluetooth settings page to discover and pair with the device.
NFC isn’t just about sharing & pairing
The CR-200 doesn’t require explicit pairing to get wireless charging but it does come with a pretty cool added bonus: a custom launch app. You install the app by using NFC (Tap & Send on your phone) to receive the content (see in the video below). From that point on you can launch the app by tapping the phone (from the phone screen) against the base of the CR-200 (or another app if you choose). Or you can simply pin the app to the home screen and launch it that way (although it actually takes two taps of the screen to launch this way). The app gives you a driving-oriented launch screen. The top pane displays the date/time, local weather, or charging status in a carousel that you can swipe through. The three large buttons underneath that are configurable quick launches into your favorite apps for driving. This includes a bonus Quick call app that you can further configure specific contacts’ numbers to show up under.
The experience
Below is a video of the overall experience using the new setup. In short, it’s awesome. I love it.
Next is a video showing the CR-200 custom launch app.
Next is a video showing how to mount and dismount the phone in the CR-200.
Next is a video showing the music control features of the BTC450 including pause/resume and next/previous track skipping.
The quirks
I’m really happy with the setup I have now, but like all things tech it has its quirks:
- 95% of the time the phone pairs with the two Bluetooth devices (the car and BTC450) in the desired manner: car for phone calls, BTC450 for audio. But a few times it’s paired with the BTC450 for music *and* calls, which is annoying. The fix I’ve found is to turn the car off, flip the phone’s Bluetooth off and on again, and then start over as usual (turn on the car, place the phone in the CR-200 and wait). I wish I could configure the relationship between the phone and the BTC450 so that it never attempted to use it for calls but it doesn’t seem to be possible. At any rate, it’s rare that it happens and easy to fix.
- The CR-200 custom app doesn’t let you select the standard Xbox Music app as one of the three quick launch buttons. This is most unfortunate as while the Nokia Music app does give you access to the music you have on the phone itself, it doesn’t give you access to the Xbox Music marketplace for streaming/download (of course), and more importantly it doesn’t give you access to your podcasts. That’s a deal breaker for me so I don’t generally use the CR-200 app.
- You can’t configure Windows Phone to stay unlocked while it has power, meaning after a few minutes of driving if you want to interact with your phone (after stopping of course) you have to find and hit the power button, swipe up, enter your passcode and then you’re off to the races. The CR-200 app *does* keep the phone unlocked while it’s running (which is great) so even though it has the music launch issue I discuss above, I sometimes switch back to it. However now that I have the WP8 GDR2 and the Nokia Amber updates on the phone, I get the time showing on the screen constantly thanks to the new Glance feature, and I can configure it to wake with a simple double tap of the screen, removing the need to hunt for the power button.
In conclusion
I’m incredibly satisfied with my in-car phone setup now. The installation looks professional (thanks in part to the fact both the CR-200 and BTC450’s color matches my car’s interior almost perfectly) and the experience of using my phone in the car is now much more convenient and safe. In the end it cost me about $150 for which I get to enjoy the result for ~10 hours each week on my way to and from work.
I have no relationship with Nokia or Kinivo. I bought both units myself because they looked like what I wanted. The links here are Amazon affiliate links. If you use them I might be able to replicate the setup in my wife’s car too! 😉
UPDATE: I forgot to mention that this setup works great with other phones that feature wireless charging too, including Android devices like the Google Nexus 4.
Oops, no petrol
Posted: April 19, 2005 Filed under: Cars Comments Off on Oops, no petrolI run out of petrol for the first time on Friday, quite funny really. I had driven on the empty light for a couple of days which in the past has been fine. But not this time, I conked out on the way to the petrol station and had to get the RACV to come and rescue me. A little embarassing but another life experience to add to the list now!