Upgrading non-navi to MB navi worth it?




My issue is that my C55 has almost every option - diamond black (*cough blue) paint, bi-xenon headlights, rain sensing/rear sunshade (although I think this was standard), HK system (standard), and the beautiful birds eye maple wood trim. I even have a few other OEM options such as AMG chrome wheels, CLK grill + flat badge, 1/8" aux cable, and CLK black/star shift knob. Plus of course that we drive AMG's.
It kinda bugs the hell out of me that when you look at the center stack of my car, you don't see what should be a seamless navigation unit - you see the standard non-navi unit. I sometimes wonder whether it's worth upgrading to the navi unit. I'm guessing that my current garmin is better and easier to use than the stock unit.....but I still wonder if I were able to find one of the latest MB dvds ($), if it would still work relatively well. I hardly use my garmin anyway, but the look of the OEM navi in my birdseye maple would definitely look better than the current unit.........
Looking for opinions





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ok short sweet to the point.
the good with aftermarket:
a bit cheaper, it will most likely be touch screen, bigger screen, plays mp3s, easy to watch dvds,
the bad with aftermarket:
90% of the time it looks like it doesnt belong on the dash , the screen is usually too bright at night, doent usually blend with the lighting accent, the sound tunning is usually ad issue compare to stock, you will have to change your stock speakers to try to make it sound right, you might have to get subs. and the worst of all you will loose steering wheel control ( unless you spend another $200 dollars to get the interface) steering wheel control is a big deal to me.

the good with oem:
it looks like its belowngs everythign is in harmony, you wont have to change your speakers, no extra wires, you keep steering wheel control, you wil get turn by turn instruction on the litle lcd on your instrument cluster ( which is really good thing you wont have to look down to remeber what exit to take or which turn is next while you are using your navy) plus you will have some command perks
the bad:
its expensive to upgrade the maps and POI, its not touch screen, the graphics are not as good as aftermarket, might be a bit pricy to ge your hands on one.
My point is i hated the aftermarket navy so much that I ended up selling the car and buying another one with command.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
As far as issues go, I had to get mine replaced/fixed three times under warranty since I bought the car a little over a year ago. Once for getting a CD stuck in the single disk behind the Command and another time when the motor failed on the screen so that it wouldn't fold back up. Then once it just stopped reading CDs all together and gave error messages. The stock Command has been a PITA since i got the car. As a matter of fact CDC is broke again too now and giving error messages of its own.

I just pulled out my service records and it looks like the time MBUSA replaced it was with a remanned unit and its retail cost was $1200.

The OEM nav setup is not as bad as everyone is saying, its just different from a Garmin or TomTom. You usually can't just enter an address in, you have to start backwards and choose the state, then city, then put in the street, and then the number. The maps are really very good, they just can't be updated like a stand alone nav unit can since the maps are on DVD.
I agree with you that the stock radio is the best for appearance, aftermarket radios look like dog crap in 95% of cars built within the recent years. I have stock radios in both my cars (factory nav in my Trailblazer, too).




Posts like fnr's make me think
about the OEM nav if it breaks.Posts like 91rs's make me think
. So you also didn't have nav? Was there anything special that you had to do (was it VIN locked, did you need any dealer star programming, etc?). Or did you just unplug the old one, put in the new one, and go on your merry way without having to do anything else?

I try not to think about crap breaking on this car, because as we all know, no matter what breaks its going to be expensive.
Does anyone know if MB has a repair facility they use for electronics like the radios and clusters that reman the parts or do they just sell you a brand new part?




Thanks for the opinions guys

Thanks for the opinions guys




I guess the question now is whether to get the Euro APS model or the US MCSII model (aside from the 203/463 question).
MCSII:
Pro:
- Just pop in the latest nav disc (2007.1 I think) and you're good to go.
- All radio functions work as original
- The flipping screen is cool to show to your friends lol
Con:
- Much harder to find second hand, and when you do it's expensive.
- Can safely buy brand new from mbenznl, but at premium $.
APS:
Pro:
- Easier to find second hand, and cheaper to buy brand new
- Fixed screen has no motor or ribbon cable to break (I've had to replace the ribbon cable twice on my Kenwood radio, but the flipping function is very sweet)
Con:
- Have to use a hybrid maps dvd (which may cause issues)
- Issues with AM reception (but I never listen to AM) and may have issues with FM (this is no good)
- No dual drive - can't listen to CD's while navigating, yet I never use a CD anyway - always use my Ipod with the aux jack. If anything, I still have the CD changer to use for CD's as well
Anybody running an APS in their AMG? I've already read all the threads in this and the 203 forum, I just like to hear if there's anyone else out there that hasn't posted their personal findings......
Thx

When researching high end sound, most concluded that the weak point in the MB HK system is the Amp. This can replaced with a better amp and clean sweep. New speakers are optional. OE speakers aren't bad, but it does depend on what you like to listen to and how loud.
I have only had to have my HK system repaired once, the Stealer downloaded updated software under warranty and its worked fine ever since.


