2024 the best gps system for cars review
Price: $299.99 - $178.07
(as of Dec 21, 2024 03:43:08 UTC - Details)
Product Dimensions | 0.75 x 6.81 x 3.9 inches |
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Item Weight | 8.5 ounces |
ASIN | B09D5PW315 |
Item model number | 010-02470-00 |
Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
Customer Reviews |
4.4 out of 5 stars |
Best Sellers Rank | #3,315 in Electronics (See Top 100 in Electronics) #6 in Vehicle GPS Units & Equipment #7 in Car In-Dash Navigation GPS Units |
Wireless communication technologies | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
Connectivity technologies | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, USB |
Special features | Driver Alerts; Tripadvisor; National Parks Directory; Find Places by Name; Garmin Real Directions™ Feature, Easy-To-Read Display; Voice Assist; Hands-Free Calling; Live Traffic and Weather; Traffic Cams and Parking; Smart Notifications |
Display resolution | 1024 x 600 |
Other display features | Wireless |
Human Interface Input | Touchscreen |
Scanner Resolution | 480 x 272 |
Color | Black |
Whats in the box | Garmin DriveSmart 76, vehicle suction cup mount, traffic receiver/vehicle power cable, USB cable and documentation |
Department | mens |
Manufacturer | Garmin |
Country of Origin | Taiwan |
Date First Available | October 13, 2021 |
Warranty & Support
Simplify your drive with the Garmin DriveSmart™ 76 GPS navigator. Use Garmin voice assist to easily find and navigate where you want to go. The crisp 7” display and map updates of North America show you the way, providing alerts for speed changes and potential hazards ahead. Make the most of road trips with Tripadvisor® traveler ratings, a directory of U.S. national parks and the HISTORY® database of notable sites. Pair with the Garmin Drive™ app running on your compatible smartphone for on-screen access to live traffic, fuel prices, parking, weather and traffic cams to help avoid delays and keep you on your way. With Alexa Built-in (Drivers should focus on driving and only use this function when safe to do so.Must pair with the Garmin Drive™ app running on your compatible phone), you can ask to play music, listen to audiobooks, hear the news and more — all while you keep your hands on the wheel and eyes on the road.
7” high-resolution navigator includes map updates of North America .Special Feature:Easy-To-Read Display; Voice Assist; Hands-Free Calling; Live Traffic and Weather; Traffic Cams and Parking; Smart Notifications,Driver Alerts; Tripadvisor; National Parks Directory; Find Places by Name; Garmin Real Directions Feature.
Hands-free calling when paired with your compatible smartphone with BLUETOOTH technology and convenient Garmin voice assist lets you ask for directions to places you want to go
Road trip–ready features include the HISTORY database of notable sites, a U.S. national parks directory, Tripadvisor traveler ratings and millions of Foursquare POIs
Driver alerts for things such as school zones, sharp curves and speed changes help encourage safer driving and increase situational awareness
Access live traffic, fuel prices, parking, weather and smart notifications when you pair this navigator with your compatible smartphone running the Garmin Drive app
With Alexa Built-in (Drivers should focus on driving and only use this function when safe to do so. Must pair with the Garmin Drive app running on your compatible phone), you can ask to play music, listen to audiobooks, hear the news and more — all while you keep your hands on the wheel and eyes on the road
Built-in Wi-Fi connectivity allows easy map and software updates without a computer
Included dual USB charger provides an extra charging port for phones, tablets or other electronics
Reviewer: Amazon Customer
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Great Navigation & Camera GPS
Review: For those of us with older vehicles that did not come with nice displays and cameras the DriveCam 76 is an indispensable tool. The first one I purchased had technical issues and would not connect up to the Garmin camera I had on the rear of the vehicle- bluetooth connectivity issues. The replacement however is working great. This 7â display is perfect for my use, mounted just under the rear view mirror itâs easy to view when driving either providing navigation, keeping track of my lanes, speed, and warning me of proximity issues. The voice commands work well to bring up or hide the rear camera view.Easy to update software and maps via WiFi in the garage - no need to pull the unit out and hook up to the computer. Integration with the Garmin Drive app provides additional function but I rarely use it and your phone can be integrated for making and receiving call if that is needed.Probably the last Garmin with dash cams and newer technology integrated with phones seems to be taking over. Glad to have this unit as it addresses my requirements.
Reviewer: Patrick H. Nguyen
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Best of both worlds (dedicated vs. smartphone)! Google traffic/POIs, Garmin nav
Review: I've been using this for over a year, and it's been fantastic. In case this review is appearing in the wrong place (because for some reason, Amazon is grouping reviews for different Garmin devices together), I'm reviewing the Garmin DriveSmart 86. If you think this is your dad's Garmin, you couldn't be more wrong. It merges the best aspects of smartphone navigation (traffic updates, points of interests (POIs)) with the excellent Garmin features. If you don't drive a lot or don't use a GPS a lot, you don't notice the problems with smartphone navigation. But use it enough and you'll notice how much better Garmin is. Do I always think Garmin navigation is always better? No. But on average, I feel 60-70% of the time it's better. Now, if I'm in a heavy traffic situation or if I'm in a very unfamiliar location, I will run both at the same time and then decide based on my prior knowledge of the area and my instincts to determine which one to trust at any given moment. Here's some pros for the Garmin. You don't need any cellular reception in order for the navigation to work. This came in quite handy when I was in areas of poor reception like rural areas. Sure, with smartphones you can download maps but that requires some preplanning. The Garmin is still the best for letting you know ahead of time what lane you should be in which comes in handy when you need to switch multiple lanes multiple times in short succession. You can also have both the map and some text turns at the same time so you can see ahead of time what your turns will be. The 86 has a fast CPU so it doesn't get laggy like older Garmins. It looks great in both vertical and horizontal orientations and for the first time, I feel like the 86 works better in the vertical orientation because of the better viewpoint. The screen is beautiful. The response and touch is great. If you connect the 86 to your smartphone via the Garmin Drive app, you now get all the benefits of the smartphone with realtime traffic (provided by Google I think) and the much bigger database of points of interests. So if you ever thought the Garmin POIs were too small or out of date or if you thought the search engine in the Garmin device was too weak, you can search in the Garmin Drive app and push that location to the Garmin GPS. Same for traffic. Garmin real-time traffic was often too slow to update but now with Garmin Drive, you never miss out on traffic alerts. If it's in Google, you'll find it in Garmin Drive. Of course, if you use Garmin Drive, you will need cellular reception but only while you're searching initially for the location. Once the Garmin is navigating, no cellular needed. The Garmin has so many options on how to pipe the audio. You can separate what type of audio goes through the Garmin and what goes through your car. So if you want phone to go through the car but nav instructions to go to the Garmin, you can. If you want everything to go to the car, you can. If you want phone and music to go to the Garmin but nav instructions to the car, you can. I send nav audio to the Garmin and everything else to the car because I've always hated the up and down volume when smartphone nav sends out nav instructions. You don't have to worry about draining your phone battery. It's easy to use the phone while navigating on the Garmin. The Garmin now uses USB C and the car charging cable also has a USB passthrough if you wanted to charge something else. The only negative (and I don't know if the situation has changed) is that at the time, there was no dashboard mount for the 86. Only the included window mount. The window mount is good but if you don't regularly clean the windshield and the mount, the Garmin will fall off.
Reviewer: MadPB
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Nice bright display, responsive touch screen, fast routing
Review: I got this to upgrade my very old Nuvi model. On those old GPS displays, the touch screen is SO frustrating and you have to really press and wait for it to recognize each tap. The old one was also frustratingly slow to recalculate the route if I detoured for something like a rest area or exit to get gas. The voice saying "Recalculating" becomes a running joke on long road trips.So, enough about the old one... the new Garmin models have a much more responsive touch screen just like cell phones. The processor in there is a lot faster to recalculate if you're doing a detour (and without the annoying voice telling you about it). It also supports extra nav systems besides GPS which seems to help it be even more accurate (with 10 feet is usually what I got). The old one would sometimes lose signals in valleys or downtown between buildings and might show me a hundred feet away, but this model does a great job of showing where I really am.The voice navigation is amazing. It was so cumbersome to type in addresses on the old one but with the nice touchscreen, that's a breeze, but what I really loved was being able to say "Okay Garmin, go to Walgreens" or something and then pick which one I wanted to go to from the list. I don't know how thorough the database of locations is, but on my recent 3500 mile road trip, I rarely asked it for something it couldn't look up. Fast food and gas stations are just fine, I even asked it to go to a Verizon store when we needed a new phone and it pulled up the nearby locations.My one gripe is probably about the connectivity to my Android phone. The Garmin Drive app works, but the GPS keeps wanting to change the volume of my phone on its own. I also connect to my car radio over bluetooth to play music, and I've setup the Drive app and GPS appropriately for that case, but it seems like when the GPS connects it wants to lower the volume of my phone (and thus how loud it plays music to the car stereo). I can turn it back up, but that only lasts until the next time I get going again. Very weird.I also had problems where the GPS would keep showing "Galaxy S8+ disconnected" over and over. I think that was the power savings on my old phone putting the Drive app to sleep... maybe? I disabled it from being able to sleep, but I haven't driven long enough after that to see if it helped, and then I updated to a newer phone anyway so the jury is still out on whether that's still an issue. That doesn't concern me too much because when I'm driving, I don't really need the GPS linked to my phone although, if I understand correctly, it can get data through that phone connection for even minor things like weather updates or road conditions that maybe the traffic data doesn't get? Or using that tether for software updates too if I'm not within range of my wifi (which really only happens when it's parked in the garage anyway).Overall I'm very happy I splurged for the update. I miss my old Nuvi 1390's ability to connect to the ecoroute module plugged into the OBDII port so I could see the real time gauges right there on the GPS, but I do have a bluetooth dongle for OBD that I can use to see that on my phone. It was just handy because I'd use that whole ecoroute stuff on the GPS to keep track of my gas usage between fillups and it would show my MPG. I got an app for that now, it just means manually putting in my mileage instead of having the GPS already know that. It'd be cool if Garmin added a gas tracker app directly on the GPS... shouldn't be that hard?
Reviewer: Ginger
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: East to install and works amazing!
Reviewer: Alberto C.
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Muy buena precisión, mapas de México y usa
Reviewer: Fito Pardo
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Llevo mas de 10 años usando GPS de Garmin llevo mas de 5 modelos diferentes siempre trato de tener el ultimo modelo por que manejo muchÃsimo, ahora estoy usando este pero mi ultimo modelo fue el mismo de Alexa pero el modelo pasado, el problema ea que Garmin es como Apple los diseña para que duren solo de 2 a 2 años y después se mueren, te hacen difÃcil cambiarle las partes en el pasado mio era un problema de baterÃa pero en mi paÃs (Mexico) nadie la vende, me salio mas barato comprar uno nuevo que cambiarle la baterÃa , mi calificación de 3 estrellas es por ese mÃnimo problema, los aparatos eléctricos ya no los hacen duraderos por eso garmin te da la opción de mapas para siempre por que sabe que el aparato no va a ser para siempre.
Reviewer: Davidchin
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Great product. Easy to setup. Maps is very detail and the words are large and easy to see and read. Very satisfied. Definitely recommend.
Reviewer: Gabriel Campuzano
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Me encanto, super preciso
Customers say
Customers like the functionality and screen size of the product. They mention it works well, the voice commands seem to work well, and the display quality is good. However, some customers disagree on ease of use, location accuracy, features, speed, and value for money.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews