Garmin Nuvi 3760

Thin, light and clad in metal and glass, the Nuvi 3760 is the first portable nav device that's tugged on our heart as well as our mind. If you can, make the financial stretch to the 3790T as that model offers a brilliant voice recognition system.


8.3
CNET Rating
5.3
User Rating

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About The Author

CNET Editor

Derek loves nothing more than punching a remote location into a GPS, queuing up some music and heading out on a long drive, so it's a good thing he's in charge of CNET Australia's Car Tech channel.


Editor's note: We reviewed the Garmin Nuvi 3790T, which has more features than the otherwise identical 3760. The review below is an amended version of the 3790T's.

Design

At the launch of the Nuvi 3700 series, the team from Garmin Australia brought a StreetPilot III model from 2001 for show and tell. Its roast beef-sized body, natty colour screen, scattershot approach to button placement and the new-found ability to discern roads from, well, everything else sat in stark contrast from the lithe and lovely Nuvi 3760.

We thought that the Navman MY500XT and the S300t before that were good-looking portable nav units, but the 3790T and its identical twin the 3760 socks it to them like a 29th second knock-out punch. The body is made from machined metal and not only feels fantastic to touch and hold but, weighing just 113g, somehow marries both lightness and rock-solid sturdiness.

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Click through for a complete photo gallery, including unboxing.
(Credit: Garmin and Derek Fung/CNET Australia)

With its 4.3-inch touchscreen, the 3760 is wider and taller than popular smartphones, such as the HTC Desire and Apple iPhone 4 — designs which, in many ways, it resembles. Without any cellular technology on-board, though, the 3760 is waif thin at 8.95mm.

As the 3760's touchscreen is capacitive in nature, it responds accurately to both presses and swipes, as well as multi-touch zoom. Graced with almost triple the number of pixels of a standard 4.3-inch GPS unit, the 800x480-pixel screen is not left wanting for sharpness and clarity, making it the second portable nav we've used that almost justifies itself inclusion of a picture viewing app. While its glossy glass screen makes colours pop, it is a magnet for both reflections and fingerprints, requiring both care with viewing angle and the cleaning cloth.

An accelerometer allows the unit to flip the screen between portrait and landscape modes, so you could conceivably use it on foot. There's a suitably loud but tinny speaker on the unit itself, as well as a powered speaker on the windscreen mount that's both loud and clear. It's a shame that although the mount does its job well, it's pretty much a standard ball-jointed Garmin affair and lacks the flair of the device itself.

Garmin's simple-to-use interface is largely unchanged: two large icons (Where To? and View Map) dominate the main menu and are underscored by smaller icons for settings, volume, Bluetooth phone connectivity and route modification. The map screen is clear and crisp, and thanks to a more powerful than usual brain animations are smooth and the map redraws quickly in nice little chunks. Neatly, the unit zooms out and changes perspective for distant manoeuvres and zooms back in for nearby turns.

Features

As Garmin's flagship GPS units for 2010, the Nuvi 3760 and 3790T come well specified. Common features include text-to-speech for spoken street names, lane guidance, junction view, Bluetooth hands-free, speed and red-light camera alerts, lane guidance, speed limit display, historical traffic information, and maps for both Australia (Whereis) and New Zealand.

The extra AU$100 investment required for the Nuvi 3790T nets the owner lifetime traffic information via the Suna network, voice control and activation, 3D buildings and terrain view. Neither unit comes equipped with an FM transmitter, MP3 playback or internet connectivity.

Bluetooth hands-free worked without a hitch on a number of phones, including the hot-to-trot Apple iPhone 4 and HTC Desire.

Like most recent Garmins, the 3760 features ecoRoute that attempts to get you to drive more economically via a host of visual aids, such as an on-map score and leaf display. At the time of writing, though, it doesn't support the ecoRoute HD Bluetooth dongle that plugs in a car's OBD-II port. On Garmin GPS units that support ecoRoute HD, drivers can view car diagnostic data and a wealth of sensor information, as well as more accurate fuel economy readings.

Performance

Equipped with Whereis' latest maps of Australia, there's lane guidance for most multi-lane roads and a junction view mechanism that primarily uses real-world photos, as opposed to somewhat unrealistic graphic renders.

By default historical traffic information, supplied by Suna and dubbed TrafficTrends by Garmin, is enabled. Routes generated with TrafficTrends are a mix of genius and sheer breathtaking stupidity; on the one hand it will avoid known bottlenecks, but on the other it will route you in circuitous routes, down unfriendly back alleys and across busy intersections without the aid of a set of traffic lights.

With TrafficTrends off (go to Tool > Settings > Navigation > Car > NuRoute) route calculation is at least 20 per cent faster on the 3790T/3760 than other Garmins and routing reverts back to the GPS norm of main roads, main roads and a few more main roads. Unlike many prior Garmins, tapping the power button puts the 3790T into sleep mode from which it can wake instantaneously.

GPS reception is fine in the suburbs and beyond, with the occasional drop out or confused position when surrounded by buildings that scrape the sky. The Nuvi's text-to-speech engine handles Australian pronunciation, as well as Aboriginal street names, pretty well.

Conclusion

A gorgeous piece of kit that works well, so long as you switch the TrafficTrends feature off. If you can, though, make the financial stretch to the top-of-the-range 3790T, as that model offers a brilliant voice recognition system.


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Citfancier
6
Rating
 

Citfancier posted a review   

The Good:Design, screen clarity & touch response

The Bad:The maps & speed limits are seriously defective

Great design.
The maps supplied by Telstra / Sensis should be called - Senseless with GPS standing for Generally Pretty Stupid.
Most annoying mapping inaccuracies experienced so far within 2 days of purchasing life time updates.
Hume highway speed limit in Victoria & part of NSW shows 100 when it is 110 kph. How can a fixed speed safety camera be 70 kph when it show we are in a 60 kph zone. 40 kms of 100 kph zone out of Beechworth shown as 60 kph. Centennial Ave Lane Cove 60 kph speed camera that has been there for 5 years does not exist. Often says turn right at No Right Turns. Many streets outside metro area either don't exist at all are are in different suburbs / towns. These streets are on a $180 Aldi GPS but not on a $430 + $180 lifetime maps from Garmin. Only recognises my Nokia 3760 phone on blue tooth about 1 in 5 times. Garmin say's it is no a compatible phone, but it comes up in the nuvi GPS as there but more often than not refuses to save & connect.
Could be great if it was as reliable as Google Maps..

 

BigG posted a comment   

The Good:Small

The Bad:Maps

Whilst a smart looker, this device lacks a decent brain. In NZ it gets lost on roads that have been there for 30 years or more, and fails to find streets that are 3-5 years old - eg try to find Peppers Clearwater Resort and Clearwater Ave, Harwood just does not exist! It got confused in Temuka, advising to drive north instead of south, and to drive from Wellington to Auckland thinks you should go via Coromandel. Garmin NZ / Aust say not their fault, as a third party provide the mapping data, and therefore they have no liability - they only sell the unit.

richard
2
Rating
 

richard posted a review   

The Good:Looks

The Bad:Garmin (non) Support, stupid navigation, out of date maps, unreliable software

I bought one of these after having a good experience with an older NUVI.
This one looks great but performs rubbish. The maps are out of date already and I can buy another sat nav for less than a map update.
Garmin customer support sucks - they don't stand by their product and aren't prepared to do anything.
The navigation frequently tells me to exit a freeway and then get straight back on again at the same junction.
The device itself often freezes or shows just a blank screen with a purple line for the selected route.
If you want to just look at it - get one of these for sure.
If you want to use it for navigation - get something good instead.

 

DPsNuvi posted a comment   

Got caught out with the software. Couldn't set an alternative Drive & software update wanted 5G of free HDD space. :-( DP

Dakota
8
Rating
 

Dakota posted a review   

The Good:Slim design, excellent screen resolution, great features

The Bad:Won't load phone address book reliably

I had the 1390T model for 6 months and loved it. Then it stopped talking to me...The sound simply stopped working. Long story short I returned it to Garmin for a new one. It spoke to me for a couple of weeks then went silent. I returned it to the store for the 3rd time. The store salesman said that another customer returned their 1390T to previous day for the same problem - no sound. I then bought the new Nuvi 3760 model - a fantastic unit with brilliant screen resoltion and detail. It's light, slim and can be rotated 90 degrees with the screen adjusting to the orientation perfectly. This unit speaks to me all the time - no sound problems at all. However the phone book loads some times and most times it doesn't. There is a way around this to manually insert the phone number for each of your saved locations under favourites. I guess having a dissfunctional address book but at least the unit talking to you all the time is an improvement over the 1390T. Would I swap the Nuvi 3760 for a Navman(I had 2 also) or a Tom Tom? Never...warts and all I love the Nuvi 3670.

 

fabmc posted a comment   

The Good:good glass display

The Bad:map themes all the same

I just got one. Good product. Very easy to use. Quality of image very good with new glass display. Also improved touch sensibility, just like the iphones. The software/hardware are working fast enough, but speed could be improved. It only lacks colors customization.

 

MichaelE2 posted a comment   
Australia

Brilliant! Perfect solution if you want a real GPS over one built into a phone. Love the ws mount, looks and feels a million bucks, pocket friendly, awesome standby battery, spot on nav.

Just waiting on updated firmware so I can use ecoroute cable (avail. Separately). No complaints from me though. i love it!

 

Correz posted a comment   

This unit looks good but appears to have significantly fewer features than my Garmin Nuvi 765T. Also commuting 22km across the Sydney metro area each day and having had SUNA traffic on both my previous Mio and Nuvi over the past 12-16 months I have to say that SUNA (= Simply Unreliable Navigation Advice) is virtually useless and its availability should not factor into any GPS decision making process.

 

Correz posted a comment   

This unit looks good but appears to have significantly fewer features than my Garmin Nuvi 765T. Also commuting 22km across the Sydney metro area each day and having had SUNA traffic on both my previous Mio and Nuvi over the past 12-16 months I have to say that SUNA (= Simply Unreliable Navigation Advice) is virtually useless and its availability should not factor into any GPS decision making process.

 

tech posted a comment   

look forward to the next review




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User Reviews / Comments  Garmin Nuvi 3760

  • Citfancier

    Citfancier

    Rating6

    "Great design.
    The maps supplied by Telstra / Sensis should be called - Senseless with GPS standing for Generally Pretty Stupid.
    Most annoying mapping inaccuracies experienced so far w..."

  • BigG

    BigG

    "Whilst a smart looker, this device lacks a decent brain. In NZ it gets lost on roads that have been there for 30 years or more, and fails to find streets that are 3-5 years old - eg try to find Pe..."

  • richard

    richard

    Rating2

    "I bought one of these after having a good experience with an older NUVI.
    This one looks great but performs rubbish. The maps are out of date already and I can buy another sat nav for less t..."

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