Garmin Nuvi 760 GPS Nuvi 760
Navigation is just the beginning. All nüvi 700s feature travel tools
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Garmin Nuvi 760 GPS Review
Highly Recommended
Nuvi 760 Software Version 2.10 / 2008 maps
This unit is replacing a nuvi 360, which is going to my sister. The nuvi 760 is
still a bit hard to find. I found one in stock at a local SoCal retailer on
28-Oct.
Overall, I like the new compact form factor. There have been concerns expressed
in various forums on the sensitivity of the internal antenna. So far, it seems
to be sensitive enough. Side by side, signal strength and accuracy of the 760
are maginally better than my old 360 with the pop-up antenna. I'm getting 21
foot accuracy inside an office, a few feet from East facing windows. Attaching
my external antenna to the MCX connector gives 9 Foot accuracy with 10
satellites at full signal strength.
The wide screen display is much brighter than the 360, readable in direct
sunlight. The interface refinements are generally improvements, cleaner, more
logical. I like having a choice of a QWERTY keyboard, better editing with
retained history for the search field. Based on limited testing, the routing
engine seems to perform identically to the 360, which was excellent. I've
noticed a few updates to reflect newer roads in the 2008 maps. POIs are much
improved in the San Diego area.
"Where am I?" works well and is quite useful displaying nearest address, major
intersection, nearby hospitals, police and gas stations. "Where did I leave my
car" is a bit clunky since you have to go into setup and change the Navigation
to "off road" and then select "Last Location" from Favorites.
I've found two bugs so far in the initial firmware:
1) Start guidance with GPS active on a stored route with a distant starting
point, decline "Navigate to Starting Point", nuvi will crash and delete the
route.
2) Bluetooth dialing of "Home" phone number is truncated when using "Call Home"
from the Phone screen. Dialing the same number from the "Home" entry in
Favorites works.
Bluetooth paired easily with my Motorola E815 phone. Call history and phone book
are loaded into the nuvi automatically. The sound from the built-in speaker is
just OK. You may want to run it through your car speakers using the FM
transmitter or Aux jack. If you use the phone a lot, buy the optional microphone
and clip it to your visor... people will hear you better.
Garmin do not provide an AC charger in the box. They will sell you one. Using a
generic USB charger (I used on from a Blackberry) places the nuvi in Data Mode.
It charges just fine, but you can't use it while it is charging.
Still no selective route avoidance. The 2008 maps actually have a road near me
that is not yet open. The nuvi always wants to take it to get to the freeway.
Haven't tested the traffic functionality yet. The nuvi comes with a 3-month
subscription, then it's $60/yr.
The FM transmitter is less than useful with the crowded spectrum in SoCal. Hard
to find an open channel, need to change it periodically. Often get a bit of
static. I'm using the Aux input on my car stereo instead.
All in all, a great evolution of the nuvi line. I'm sure the firmware glitches
will get worked out over time. If you are in the market at this price range and
can find one, buy it.
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Simple to operate and works great!
I've never written a review but this item caused me to take the time. I've owned a Magellan Meridian Platinum for years mainly for geocaching. Great handheld unit but not user friendly. When I decided to get something for my vehicle I found the Garmin Nuvi 760. What a great unit! Simple to use out of the box, very user friendly, not intimidating at all and works as advertised. Very bright display even in the Arizona sun. The vehicle mount is the best design ever! Easy to pop out and put in your pocket and pop it back in when you return to your car.
Yesterday I needed to go to 3 places in Tucson I had never been before. Normally
I would print out maps for each place and try to find my way through traffic
while glancing at them. With the Nuvi, I simply entered each address and drove
from one to the other without any problems even though downtown Tucson is a mess
with all the highway construction. Nuvi simply kept recalculating new routes
whenever I encountered blocked roads etc. Amazing gadget and while expensive, if
you need to get to where you going as fast as possible, like me, worth every
penny!
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Recommended over TomTom 920T and Magellan 4250..
I feel a great amount of sympathy for consumers shopping for a portable GPS
systems or any sophisticated electronic product for that matter. There is such a
dizzying array of models/brands/functions that it is both a blessing and a
curse. I am very tech oriented and enjoy researching and evaluating new
electronic gadgets. After a few days of reviewing GPS brands and models, I
narrowed my selections down to the Garmin 760, Garmin 680, TomTom 920T and the
Magellan Maestro 4250.
I am not going to dive deeply into the features and benefits of each model
because many of the reviews on Amazon and other websites do a great job of that.
However, I will summarize my thought process for finally choosing the 760 as the
best GPS for me. Let me start by stating that there is no perfect GPS system and
therein lies the challenge. Every model that I looked at had strengths and
weaknesses and there wasn't a product that made it a clear cut decision. What I
did (and recommend) is to make a priority list of the features and functions
that are most important to you and to pick the model that best fits your
requirements. This sounds like an obvious approach but it was a lot harder than
it sounds.
The single most important aspect for me was the accuracy and capability of the
routing engine. That seems simple enough but when you throw in the all the other
features offered in today's GPS models the decision making process becomes much
muddier. In staying with my original strategy, I determined that the Garmin 7xx
series had the best routing engine for North America. My conclusion is based on
consumer and professional reviews, discussion boards, and my own testing. With
that being said, the 760 is not perfect and I have experienced a few quirky
directions but nothing that was of great concern.
How do I like the 760? For the most part, I am extremely pleased with the
performance and functionality of the 760. Like most people I do have a list of
my personal improvement and enhancements for the system but they are not deal
breakers. When I first received the unit, I tested it on a trip to Palm Springs
and Joshua Tree National Park. The directions to and from the Park and Palm
Springs were flawless and the GPS recognized all the main roads within the park.
We actually encountered some road construction on one of the main highways and
the traffic receiver recognized the jam but gave us a strange recommendation. It
directed us to go down the off-ramp and immediately get on the next on-ramp. We
did this twice and it actually moved us ahead in traffic. I'm not sure how
effective that strategy would be in other similar situations. The speaker volume
could be louder but I could easily understand the commands traveling at 80 mph.
I have also tested the system on several routes throughout Southern California
and the system performed very well. All of the main features worked as published
with a few exceptions noted below. The user interface is very well designed and
I was able to operate 80% of the functions without reading the manual. In
addition to the 760, I also purchased the Garmin Friction Dashboard Mount which
I believe is superior to the glass suction mount provided.
So why did I only give it 4 stars? The one big annoyance for me was that if you
directly input the POI name, the search can take a long amount of time (greater
than 5 minutes)if it goes outside of your vicinity. This is extremely slow
compared to our in-dash GPS system. The touch screen could be more responsive
and is not that sensitive especially with the browse map option. The 760
bluetooth pairs consistently and quickly with my Motorola KRZR phone but the
receiving and transmitting sound quality is very poor. The FM transmitter is
unusable.
I really wanted to like the TomTom 920T especially with the voice recognition,
user updates for maps and a long list of customizations. However, the routing
engine seems to produce more inconsistent performance than the Garmin and I
could not find enough information on their mapping data to understand how
accurate it is today. The two main providers of map data are Navteq and Tele
Atlas. Garmin and Magellan use Navteq and TomTom uses Tele Atlas. In the past,
Navteq has been considered more accurate and complete for North America but Tele
Atlas has made significant updates in recent times. Interestingly the 760 uses
Garmin's 2008 North American maps but the source data is 18 to 24 months old
which shows there is always a large lag in map information. Garmin has been very
good at providing updates more frequently than the other manufacturers. My
impression is that TomTom is much stronger with the European maps than the NA
maps.
Here is a quick rundown of how I view the models:
Magellan Maestro 4250:
Pros: multi point destination routing with optimization, great address and text
input system
Cons: questionable routing engine, outdated map data, inconsistent voice
recognition, cumbersome POI interface, poor text to speech quality, poor
customer support in US
TomTom 920T
Pros: voice recognition, enhanced positioning technology, map share, excellent
customization options, multi-destination routing
Cons: questionable routing engine, outdated map data (although this is somewhat
offset by map share), no routing optimization, cumbersome user interface
Garmin 760
Pros: routing engine seems very good, multi-destination routing optimization,
good POI database, more map updates compared to competition, great user
interface
Cons: touch screen is not very sensitive, outdated map data, FM transmitter is
useless, expensive
Garmin 680
Pros: most of the same features and functionality as the 760 but with MSN
Direct, louder speaker volume than 760, much better value than the 760
Cons: no multipoint destination, older look and feel than the 760
I have only listed a limited set of the pros and cons for each of the different
models but these were the areas that stood out the most to me. When it's all
said and done, I probably would have been happy with any of these models but if
you can afford the 760 and routing directions in North America is your most
important requirement then I would highly recommend the 760.
I have seen questions about whether the 760 comes with the SiRF Star III chip
and the unit that I just purchased from Amazon did come with that chip. The SiRF
is a high performance GPS chipset that can quickly acquire and maintain a lock
onto satellite signals for position information. It is considered the chipset of
choice for the higher end mobile GPS devices. All of the models I have described
above have the SiRF chipset. I also have seen questions about how quickly the
760 can lock onto satellites. I updated my system firmware to version 2.6 and
the satellite acquisition time is lightning fast. I have found in outside
environments, my 760 can consistently acquire a signal in under 10 seconds even
first thing in the morning.
There are a couple of other useful features that are not described in the
instruction manual. If you hold down on the signal strength bar in the top left
corner, you will get the satellite acquisition screen which shows the position
accuracy. If you hold down on the battery indicator for a few seconds, this will
allow access to the diagnostic screen which is where you can identify the GPS
chipset among other information.
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