By robf
If your looking for the best portable gps that is easy to use, picks up the satellite signals quickly, has text to speech, is small, and is not pricey, you have found it in the garmin 255. The only drawbacks are the voices are not good quality, but are comprehendable, and that it doesn’t have bluetooth.
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By Douglas M. Peters
I chose this over the wide screen version and glad I did. It fits nicely in your pocket and you don’t really need the extra inch or so of width anyhow - it’s not like you’re watching movies on thing. Very accurate directions except when in an area with tight side streets and you may need to pause for a second or two at an intersection to let it catch up with where you are. You can download extra “cars” from Garmin website for amusement on the 3-D display and the ability to direct send coordinates from Google or Mapquest via USB to the Garmin’s Favorite list is perfect. A $5 GPS cable is all you need - and it’ll charge the device too to boot.
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By George Varghese
This is the fourth GPS that I have tried. Initially I had the VZ Navigator system from verizon. It’s a phone GPS and works very well. However, I had to discard that after I moved from Verizon.
Then I got the top rated Nuvi Garmin 350. Garmin nüvi 350 3.5-Inch Portable GPS Navigator with Text-to-Speech When I started using it, I realized that its navigation features where inferior to VZ navigator. I was surprised that a dedicated GPS had less features than a phone GPS. Few things that annoyed me with nuvi 350.
1) It wouldn’t show the distance or direction of next turn. I had to press the turn list, everytime I needed to check the distance to next turn. Also, since the direction of turn is not shown in advance, you could endup on the wrong lane before the turn.
2) The arrival time shown on the display would not take into account the time zone. If you travel a lot between time zones, you are always forced to calculate the actual arrival time using the time shown on the display.
3) It wouldn’t remember the last entered city. You have to re-enter the city, everytime you enter an address.
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By Diane Sanders “Obi Wan Nuvi”
After much research I decided on the Nuvi 255 due mostly to the fact that it is the least expensive model with TTS (Text to speech) in other words it speaks street names so that you can keep your eyes on the raod ahead.
This unit also has the ability to get traffic updates via a separate cable (GTM-10 or GTM-12 Traffic Receiver) that can be purchased through Amazon.com. I have not purchased this extra item, so I cannot comment on how this works.
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By d-18v
My son, who does not drive, wanted a GPS because most of his friends, who DO drive, don’t have one. He thinks of it, along with some gas money, as his contribution to the trip. Since it was dad’s money paying for it, I decided to give him my nuvi 260 so that I could get a 255 with its ability to make use of traffic information. (I’ve just ordered the receiver and will report on that aspect later.)
I’m not quite sure how to review a GPS. The 255 makes the fourth GPS in out family. The others are the Garmin nuvi 200, 260, 260w. Since there are so many makes and models on the market and few people will own multiple GPSs, the most helpful information would be areas in which a particular unit was found to be lacking. I’ve never found any of these units to be lacking. Other than the well reported difficulties they sometimes have locating satellites (the 255 seems a bit better in this regard), there’s nothing about the Garmins that would make me want to try a different brand.
People debate about the 255’s voices. Many prefer the 260’s voices. My wife is one of them. I find the 255’s voices similar to the 260’s, except that I miss Emily. She and I have grown close over the months we’ve been together, but, alas, she was unable to make the jump to the 255. The format of the voice files must have changed. The .vpm files on the 260 are 10+kb, where those on the 255 are about 2kb and Emily was not offered as a download. So, Emily is no more. She was not included on the 255 and I could not get the voice file from the 260 to work on the 255.
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By AC “gear guy”
I purchased the Nuvi 255 as a replacement for my Nuvi 350. There is nothing wrong with the 350Garmin nüvi 350 3.5-Inch Portable GPS Navigator with Text-to-Speech. The 255Garmin Nuvi 255 3.5-Inch Portable GPS Navigator has safety features I want which include “Where Am I” that gives your location by street address, city, state, zip code, nearest intersection and coordinates. This is important in an emergency in a strange and/or unfamiliar location. Another safety feature is the display of the posted speed limit directly above your actual speed. This helps to avoid tickets and reminds one about safe driving.
For the full review, click here
By George Rausch
Let me set the scene for you: I arrive in Los Angeles at the airport, turn on my GPS system and instantly am ready to navigate. I then spend two days driving around Los Angeles not knowing where anything is located and haven’t gotten lost once…
The nuvi 255, as in my review title, is everything you need. Don’t spend more because you think you’ll need to talk for navigation or that you want to connect to some navigation service or whatever else they’re selling. This is a small, FAST, device that you can easily carry with you when it isn’t in your car. And folks, that’s part of a portable GPS system: you can take it with you so it doesn’t get stolen.
Get the full review here