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Garmin nuevi 270 3.5-Inch Portable GPS Navigator | 
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| Brand: Garmin Category: CE
List Price: $649.99 Buy New: $159.99 You Save: $490.00 (75%)
New (42) Used (2) from $145.99
Rating: 115 reviews Sales Rank: 108
Platform: Not Machine Specific Media: Electronics Memorabilia: No Fragile: No Batteries Included: Yes Native Resolution: 320 x 240 Display Size: 3.5 Includes MP3 Player: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 4 Dimensions (in): 3.8 x 0.8 x 2.8 Legal Disclaimer: Warranty does not cover misuse of product.
MPN: Nuvi 270 Model: Nuvi 270 UPC: 753759068080 EAN: 4060800148858 ASIN: B000OH26OM
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Features:
| • | 3.5-Inch Qvga Display | | • | Sleek, Pocketable Form Factor | | • | No Flip-Up Antenna | | • | Full Coverage Of Us & Europe | | • | Map Data Of Internal Flash Memory |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Product Description Navigate both North America and Europe without loading more maps with the affordable nuevi 270. This entry-level Personal Travel Assistant makes traveling so simple. For even more mapping options, nuevi 250 and nuevi 200 offer less map coverage at a lower price. Like all nuevi 200-series members, the 270 features an easy-to-use colorful touchscreen and ultra-slim design--perfect for everyday navigation. 
The nuevi 270 comes preloaded with maps for North America and Europe, and features an easy-to-use touchscreen and ultra-slim design. | 
Configurable vehicle icons let you select car-shaped graphics. | 
nuevi 270 accepts custom points of interest (POIs). View larger. | Smart, Powerful Design The nuevi 270 is built with a high-sensitivity WAAS-enabled GPS receiver for extreme accuracy, as well as an SD card slot for storing your media and additional navigation tools, and a USB interface for loading data. All this is wrapped up in a package that measures 3.8 x 2.8 x .8 inches (W x H x D) and weighs just 5.2 ounces. The nuevi 270's 3.5-inch (diagonal) display is touchscreen-enabled, making it a cinch to control the device with your fingertips. A rechargeable lithium-ion battery provides up to five hours of battery life depending on use. Navigate with Ease nuevi 270 comes ready to go right out of the box with preloaded City Navigator NT street maps, including a hefty points of interest (POIs) database with hotels, restaurants, fuel, ATMs and more. Simply touch the color screen to enter a destination, and nuevi takes you there with 2D or 3D maps and turn-by-turn voice directions. In addition, nuevi 270 accepts custom points of interest (POIs), such as school zones and safety cameras and lets you set proximity alerts to warn you of upcoming POIs. Go Beyond Navigation Navigation is just the beginning. nuevi 270 features many travel tools including JPEG picture viewer, world travel clock with time zones, currency converter, measurement converter, calculator and more. It also comes with Garmin Lock, an anti-theft feature, and configurable vehicle icons that let you select car-shaped graphics to show your location on the map. Optional plug-in SD cards for our line of Garmin Travel Guides and Garmin SaversGuide provide detailed data for attractions and information on nearby merchants offering discounts, so you can customize nuevi for your travel needs. Note: Like most USB Mass Storage Devices, the nuevi is not compatible with Windows 95, Windows 98 or Windows Me. What's in the Box nuevi 270, preloaded City Navigator NT for North America and Europe (full coverage), vehicle suction cup mount, vehicle power cable, dashboard disk, and set up and go guide.
| Customer Reviews: Read 110 more reviews...
nuvi 270 December 1, 2008 William Magee hired one of these for a recent holiday in maine,on arrival in boston switched it on and after a few minutes waiting for it to aquire sattellites we were on our way. simple directions and a map to follow found us out of boston without a cross word or a wrong turning which in its self is a miracle easy to use with all the points of interest i was so impressed that i bought one the next day it may not have all the latest bells and whistles but it gets you to your destination and tells you when you will arrive with maps of n america and europe it should cover all popular vacation destinations
Useful and cheap with European and US maps December 1, 2008 Gerald J. Lapeyre (Tucson) The Garmin Nuvi 270 is useful, cheap, compact, and has a simple interface. But, some simple additions to the firmware would make it more useful to the majority of its users. I have not compared it to similar units or other consumer electronics with similar displays and batteries etc., but it is a great improvement in these respects on some devices I know from three to seven years ago. It seems like this is the best or only choice for a cheap, small, useful, unit with north American and European maps, provided the unit can lock satellites where you are (so far it works great for me, but others have problems) The unit I write about here has Software Version 4.20, Audio Version 2.20, and GPS SW Version 2.60m. It came with 2008 Europe maps and 2009 N.A. maps. I have heard that Garmin has put different GPS hardware chips in the Nuvi 270 and this may affect the reception, but I don't know if this is true. 1) It is small; easy to carry or put in a pocket. But the screen is easy to read given the size. However, trying with my big fingers to get the pointer over a POI so that its label is displayed takes patience. Having the touchscreen instead of physical buttons keeps the unit small. However, it would be nice to be able to choose which buttons and information are displayed so that more display could be dedicated to the map. 2) Reception is fine in Tucson, but I am only comparing to a Magellan Meridian. The 270 takes about 40 s to boot. It can lock satellites immediately or take a minute. (These devices typically remember where they last saw the satellites on shutdown) 3) The basic navigation and display are fine. I have not compared too much with the Meridian (with DirectRoute). After a little research, I could not find another unit with street maps of both Europe and the US that I was willing to pay for. The maps are much more detailed and complete than the maps for the Meridian of a few years ago. 4) It is very easy to get the unit in and out of the small windshield mounting bracket and very easy to get the single, very firm, suction cup on and off the windshield. (there is a lever to apply and release suction.) The bracket hold the unit firmly and it is easy to orient. Much better than my old Magellan. 5) The screen is very bright, with brightness easily adjustable. The battery lasts a long time, especially given the brightness of the screen. The spoken turn directions are very loud on the highest speaker setting. 6) The unit is charged by the cigarette-lighter adaptor that is supplied. It can also be charged via a usb port on a computer. Garmin's AC adaptor is good but is sold separately, which is good because it reduces the cost. It has only one port for both data and power-- a standard mini-usb port. There is no cable supplied, which again is good because it makes the unit cheaper. The required cable is the same that comes with most digital cameras, usb card readers etc. Most potential buyers probably already have the cable. I have read that the battery is not 'user-serviceable', but that actually you can replace it with work. Garmin will replace it for far more than what you payed for the unit. Unfortunately, the industry sees these kinds of products as disposable. 7) Contrary to what many people write, the manual does exist. There is a single manual for the entire 200 series. The pdf can be found via google or at Garmin's website. 8) Just to answer some of the other reviews: It does not know which way you are facing or where you are going even if you take a step forward: This is inherent to the GPS system. GPS technology only tells you where you are, not your speed or the orientation of the device. The devices use a clock and memory to know where you have been at different times, and use this to *compute* speed and direction-- not possible if you are standing still. GPS is not accurate enough to tell that you have taken a step. It is possible to add an electronic compass or other instruments to these devices, but that adds a expense, bulk, etc. 9) POIs. You can't choose which are displayed (eg only display gas stations). You can't choose when they are displayed-- The POIs appear at zoom level of 300 feet or closer. You can upload your own POIs which is really nice. I loaded the POIs for channel markers in a bay, but you have to zoom in till the screen is pure blue (300 foot zoom) to see them. You can add POIs to your favorites list and then they appear and are labeled at *all* zoom levels. But this is an awkward and inflexible solution. Contemporary consumer electronics like this unit are powerful computers with fast processors and a bunch of memory, and are programmable with high-level tools. This (and other similar problems) could be fixed easily and cheaply by their software engineers. 10) Browsing and locating features on the map is cumbersome or difficult (again this is an easy programming task) One example is, as several people noted, that only a limited selection of items closest to your location are displayed on a list. You can only search more or less easily for things close to where the unit is. You can search for things near another 'city'. For example, if you search for restaurants in Barcelona, it will show you a small list of restaurants within a half a block of the point that it thinks is the middle of Barcelona. But that is more frustrating than useful. Paris is at least broken into districts. I guess that being able to browse the map easily and mark items, etc., is the software feature that most users would miss. 11) It does not have a tracking function or other navigation functions (bearing vs. heading) that would make the unit much more useful. Apparently firmware version 3.40 had a hidden menu that could save a track, but this was removed in later firmware. Why? I don't know. It could be part of a misguided marketing strategy. Maybe they imagine that, by omitting the tracking function, we are more likely to buy the Oregon model plus European maps for $500+. 12) The menu navigation and display are cumbersome and inflexible in many ways as noted in other reviews. The menu system is cumbersome, requires lots of clicks ( but it is also pretty easy.) To change the screen brightness from the main navigation screen requires six clicks (plus the clicks to adjust the brightness) and five to get back to the map. The Magellan Meridian had eight different information screens with highly configurable information. It is good to have less important information invisible by default for the majority of users who want to spend as little time as possible with the GPS. But, an 'advanced' mode to turn these on on the 270 would be a good addition.
Great for America and Europe! November 29, 2008 A. Rivera (Bossier City, LA) My boyfriend and I recently went on a 2 week roadtrip through Germany, Switzerland, Italy,and Austria. We went all over the Alps!!! If we wouldn't of had the Garmin nuvi 270 GPS, we'd probably STILL be there b/c of being lost! It was wonderful! Occasionally, when we'd go through a tunnel that was over 700 feet long, we'd loose the satellite signal, but as soon as we got out of the tunnel the GPS was back on track again! I HIGHLY recommend this for anyone traveling locally, or abroad!!
Garmin Nuvi 270 November 26, 2008 Kong Son (Mountain View, CA) Pros: Works great, durable (dropped it hard few times with no issues), and great value for price. Been using it in the US, Canada and England. Tons of preloaded locations for restaurants, easy to read and understand. I highly recommend it. Cons: Not sure if this is unique to Garmin Nuvi 270 but it takes over 30 sec to initialize, not bad but if there was an area where Garmin could improve, it would be to reduce the boot time. Also for editing, cursor that allows it to go to any letter would be a nice feature, rather than just a backspace option.
Great Value November 25, 2008 smithcover (Gloucester, MA. United States) I purchased this because of the Europe maps included. We plan to give it a workout in Southern France this summer. So far I've been comparing it with my garmin 250W that I purchased Oct 2007. The windshield looks pretty funny with them both mounted there but I have learned a few things too. The two are identical at directions in New England. They speak together most of the time and the displays vary very little. Speaking of "Very little" - I prefer the wide screen size of the 250w in the car because you see more info. I find it a bit easier to read the directions too. HOWEVER - The 250w cost $289 13 months ago with USA maps only. The new 270 cost $159 on Amazon With USA/Europe included . The minute I registered I was offered a free 2009 Garmin Europe update on the 270 for free. Not bad, and it will fit nicely in my shirt pocket in France. I believe that it is discontinued but with a free update it's a great $159 free shipping deal (I think it was $600 a few years ago). I have to laugh at some of the other reviews. No, it won't Say the street names/ No it won't do traffic alerts/No, it wont do bluetooth/ bet it won't tie your shoes either! If you want those features just pay for a more expensive model. This one is a huge bargain. Works great and won't break the bank.
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