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| Motorola Car HF1000 Bluetooth Car Kit | 
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| Brand: Motorola Car Category: Wireless
List Price: $299.99 Buy New: $192.95 You Save: $107.04 (36%)

New (12) Used (1) from $192.95
Avg. Customer Rating: 25 reviews Sales Rank: 1781
Media: Wireless Phone Accessory Shipping Weight (lbs): 0 Dimensions (in): 0.1 x 0 x 0.1
Model: HF1000 UPC: 723755986763 EAN: 0646444987820 ASIN: B0008IV508
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Customer Reviews:
Excellent purchase! December 1, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I'm very pleased with the quality of this product. It is just as good as most factory installed bluetooth I've seen and heard on some new model automobiles. The voice recognition has worked great... not a single misdialed number. I had it professionally installed for $50. Be aware that the radio interface only works on newer model automobiles; say the last three years or so. On my older model car, I am relying on the 5 inch speaker which is included in the kit. It works very well. We'll be buying a second kit for my wife's car.
Better than most, but speaker not loud enough! November 13, 2007 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
This is a well designed product overal. It worked well with my cell phone (Blackberry) and my wifes (Motorolla Razr). It always worked and it connected automatically when you start the car. No extra buttons to push on the phone or car, just start the ignition and it powers up detects your phone, connects, and works every time.
A word of advice -- you need, absoultely must mount the microphone on the visor pointed toward the driver, in order for people on the other end to hear you well, and for the voice commands to work well when you are driving.
The bad -- the only bad thing about this is the little wimpy speaker was just too underpowered. If I was on the freeway, I really just couldn't hear other people well and I was constantly asking people to repeat themselves. This was really, really anoying. What's worse is that my car is realatively quite on the freeway compaired to most. (Honda Accord V6) So if you have a small 4-cyl car you'll never be able to hear people on the freeway.
If it were built to interface with the built in car speakers that would've been a much better solution.
Buy it. September 24, 2007 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I just bought a new Blackberry and needed a hands free option. I heard great things about this Bluetooth kit and they are all true. Anyone who is complaining is a tech nerd. I had Verizon install it. It's easy to program and easy to use. I found a nice holder for my phone and I'm in business. Worth every penny!
Car Kit July 28, 2007 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
we have had 3 or 4 different car kits. this one is the best.
IHF 1000 June 1, 2007 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
Just installed it myself in my 1998 Expedition. Paired it with my Motorola RAZR. I wanted to have the audio come through the factory speakers, but I couldn't find a compatible T-harness for my model year, so I had to use the speaker that came with the unit. The audio from the IHF 1000 speaker is VERY good, so not being able to use the factory speakers turned out to be not a big deal at all. Without the T-harness, you'll need to connect 3 wires to your vehicle: Ground, +12V battery, and +12V Ignition. I've only used it a couple of days but I haven't had a single voice command misfire yet. I mounted the microphone on the headliner to the left of the driver's visor. The 20 numbers you can program right into the unit makes this model worth the extra money. You have to issue a couple extra voice commands to access all the voice tags in the RAZR, so I have about 6 numbers I call most often programmed into the IHF1000 and access all the other numbers in my RAZR through additional voice commands. I've used the Motorola ear-piece and speaker phone units clipped on the visor. They're not even in the same league.
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