Product
Description
Now you can go from
North America to Europe without loading
any more maps with the Garmin's
transatlantic nuvi 670 Personal Travel
Assistant. This pocket-sized personal travel
assistant comes with built-in street maps for
both continents, making traveling abroad as
easy as getting off the plane.
The Garmin nuvi 670 is
loaded with convenience features such as a
travel kit and hands-free
calling, on top of which it provides
you with even more maps and an integrated
traffic receiver.
Despite being loaded with features, the
Garmin nuvi 670 still allows you to
navigate with ease. This unit comes ready to go
right out of the box with preloaded NavTeq City
Navigator NT street maps for both North America
and Europe, and includes a hefty points of
interest (POIs) database with hotels,
restaurants, fuel stops, ATMs and
more.
Simply touch the super-bright,
sunlight-readable color screen
to enter a destination, and the Garmin
nuvi 670 takes you there with either 2D or
3D maps and turn-by-turn voice
directions. This navigator voice even
announces the name of exits and streets so you
never have to take your eyes off the road, and
can concentrate on your driving to keep
yourself and your loved ones safe.
In addition, the
Garmin nuvi 670 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 that require your special
consideration such as speed zones and safety
cameras.
Garmin Nuvi 670
Widescreen Portable GPS
The
most helpful favorable
review
414
of 420 people found the following
review helpful:
Good, but
with some surprising old Garmin
faults
I bought this to replace a Tomtom
Navigator 5 system running on a Dell
x51v with the external Tomtom Bluetooth
receiver. The major issues with that
were a terrible lack of POIs, terrible
time and distance predictions, poor
routing, no control of the map view and
the receiver shutting off despite being
on external power.
First thing I noticed on opening the...
Published on March 21, 2007 by Chris
Hann
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