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Garmin nuvi 755T GPS

Garmin nuvi 755T GPS

Garmin - 0100071530Release Date: Sep 2008

Navigation takes a high-tech turn with nuvi 755T, featuring lane assist. This feature guides you to the proper lane for navigation. nuvi 755T also includes preloaded maps, turn-by-turn directions that call out streets by name and lifetime traffic. Like the rest of the nuvi 705-series, this advanced ... Read Moreavigator comes with premium features including 3-D building view, photo navigation, faster screen redraws, route planning, emergency and car locators and much more. Minimize

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Summary of User Reviews

Number of Reviews: 4
Positive Reviews: 100%
Negative Reviews: 0%
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Positive Review

Reviewed by: delsignore875 on 11-Nov-09

Strengths: Many features, Traffic works very well(Boston area) as well as lane assist, speed limit display, estimated time to destination adjusts according to the users driving habits

Weaknesses: First Nuvi 755T was in accurate, gave instructions to turn after turn was completed many other issues. Second Nuvi 755T traffic did not work. Third Nuvi 755T - works very well

Summary: Battery indicates that it is low after 5-10 minutes, but actually lasted 2 1/2 hours. Four weeks ago the battery indicator was working fine. Not sure if the change is related to how I use/charge it.

Positive Review

Reviewed by: 14-Sep-09

Strengths: Everything I need and want. Lane & exit assist,easy to use.

Weaknesses: None I noticed.

Summary: This is my first GPS. I have no sense of direction. I can go anywhere now. It is so easy to use and so nice to see how far to the next gas station, check for resturants, know what exit I need to be in and plenty of notice for exits and lane changes. I got much more than I hoped for.

Positive Review

Reviewed by: PGelsman on 18-Mar-09

Strengths: Price, features, ease of use

Weaknesses: none so far

Summary: I bought this model for it's features, I've got enough monthly charges for new technology stuff not to have to pay for Traffic updates (currently $60/year.)It may be me and my wife, but everytime we skip a turn, it seems the voice sounds a little more annoyed 'recalculating' she says, its hilarious.We live in NY and the traffic alerts are great, they could be better, but we're satisfied so far. My wife does most of the driving, so I program it and make changes, I can see and read the screen without my glasses, it's very bright as well. I found a site where I can download free 'points of interest' I've got every Starbucks and outlet mall on the east coast programmed in. Overall, highly recommended. I paid $399.99 for it in November 2008. Bought it online through Pricegrabber.

Positive Review

Reviewed by: thorgils on 03-Mar-09

Strengths: Speed and precision of basic navigation. Good text-to-speech capability.

Weaknesses: "Lane assist" is barely ready for prime time. Real-time traffic information is sometimes not current.

Summary: After 2 months? use in the Boston, Washington DC, and Portland (OR) metropolitan areas, and also on O?ahu, I feel qualified to review this product. I chose this model because it combined the functions in which I was interested, which I?ll discuss in turn.Basic navigation functionsI?ve not had much experience with auto GPS units since the original Hertz ?NeverLost? model, so I can't compare the nĂ¼vi with current competitors. However, I?m very impressed with the speed and spatial precision of this unit. Even long and complicated routes are computed in less than 10 seconds. Route variations are detected quickly and a revised route is computed speedily. I can pass a speed limit sign and within no more than one or two seconds the changed speed limit will usually appear on the screen. I?m impressed, too, with how the unit automatically scales the map to a level appropriate for current navigation purposes.Problems with basic navigation are few. The most serious one happened only in Portland (OR), perhaps relating to the quality of the mapping there. The unit pinpoints the vehicle?s start position within a rectangular grid of streets absolutely correctly, but when I request a routing the unit sometimes tells me to ?drive to the highlighted route? starting several blocks away from my current position (sometimes even off the current map). Yet it has no difficulty navigating back correctly through the same grid all the way to the starting point.I've also noticed variability between cities in what are regarded as decision points meriting the provision of route guidance there. On the Washington DC highway system, for example, merges and splits that in Boston would have been treated as decision points are not identified in the same way.Another improvement to ?basic navigation? would be valuable. At the highest levels of map magnification, it would be useful to have arrows showing the directions of one-way streets.Street name pronunciationThe unit comes with a wide array of voices, languages, and national shades of English. I?m impressed with the capabilities of the name pronunciation feature; it works well most of the time, and given the idiosyncrasies of the English language that?s quite an achievement. It struggles, of course, with unfamiliar word structures (e.g., Hawai?ian names) or non-standard pronunciations (e.g., ?Van-cow-ver?), but there are a few more mundane peculiarities. In Washington DC, where a compass quadrant designation follows many street names, the ?St.? is invariably pronounced ?Saint.? ?Rt.? for ?route? is pronounced ?artee.? The most ingenious muddle so far has been ?Ames St.,? parsed as ?American English Street.?Lane assistIn Massachusetts the highway department?s motto is ?Never give a sucker advance notification of the lane he needs to be in,? so Garmin?s ?Lane assist? feature was a strong reason to choose this model. But as of now, it is the most disappointing feature. First, only certain areas currently have this capability, and I have been unable to find on the Garmin website any indications of just where it is available. It is available in the Boston and Portland areas, for example, but I saw no evidence of it in the Washington DC and Honolulu areas. Secondly, it appears to be currently available primarily on the Interstate system (where highway signage standards are relatively good), whereas it would be of much greater value to drivers in dense urban core areas (e.g., lane guidance for Dupont and Washington Circles and the Potomac bridges in Washington DC). But it isn?t clear to me whether the Navteq maps used by Garmin even have the basic lane detail to allow such guidance to be feasible eventually, even with a significant expansion of the geographical coverage for ?Lane assist.?Free real-time traffic informationThis was another strong attraction of this model. I concur with other reviewers who have opined that the advertising that allows the information to be accessed without a subscription charge is not at all a distraction (it?s small, and appears only at the end of a trip or when the vehicle is stationary). But I haven?t experienced congested conditions often enough yet to form strong opinions about its efficacy. In the Boston area I?ve experienced slow moving highway traffic a number of times (an amber traffic symbol on the screen, along with an estimate of the traffic delay minutes) and have occasionally noted that the system?s information was not very current, but up to now I haven?t had a high enough congestion level for the system to generate an alternate routing.In overview, I?m very pleased with this model and glad that I bought it (particularly at a Thanksgiving weekend 43% discount from MSRP), but I would caution purchasers not to expect too much from either ?Lane assist? or Navteq FM traffic at this stage of their development.