Review

Hands on with the Bentley Flying Spur (Bluetooth)

By: | Nov 2nd, 2006 at 01:33AM
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Filed Under: Review

The Bentley Flying Spur is Bentley’s four-door version of the popular coupe. Drastically changing the technology inside for the better made me want to take a more in depth look at what this car has to offer. Unlike the GT you no longer have to use a peasant Nokia phone as your car phone. Throwing away the standard Pop-Port connector and adding Bluetooth could not be a more welcome change. It gets better. This isn’t just bluetooth here, this is rSAP Bluetooth. Should I stop? No way. The Bentley Flying Spur also provides a SIM card reader in the armrest which works so flawlessly a tear started to roll down my face. The menu and GUI might not be the prettiest thing in the world, but it does what Bentley does best; keep it simple, keep it classy, and have it work perfectly. Click on for some more explanations of how this technology integrates into the car and more pictures than you probably care for.

This is the LCD screen that controls the Bluetooth. Beneath it is a simple directional wheel to select your options.

Here is the SIM card slot I was referring to. Simply drop the card right in, and your good to go! It uses the built-in antenna in the car so your reception is improved by at least 2-3 times.

This is the main control screen throughout the car. You can read text messages at anytime but you can’t compose one. I know, sad.

Oh look, a message from Bentley

On the steering wheel there are many different controls from voice commands, send/end key, select wheel, and the obvious volume buttons.

Here is the display you are most likely to look at while driving. It offers a slimmed down version of the main screen shown earlier.

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Jonathan S. Geller

Jonathan S. Geller

Jonathan Geller is the founder of Boy Genius Report, now known as BGR. What began as a column on popular gadget blog Engadget quickly grew into one of the site’s biggest draws, and Jonathan soon detached the wildly popular column to create what has since become the biggest mobile news destination in the world.


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