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TomTom GO 920 Portable GPS Vehicle Navigator

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 Location:  Home » GPS » GPS » TomTom GO 920 Portable GPS Vehicle NavigatorNovember 18, 2008  
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TomTom GO 920 Portable GPS Vehicle Navigator
TomTom GO 920 Portable GPS Vehicle Navigator

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Brand: TomTom
Category: CE

List Price: $449.95
Buy New: $298.00
You Save: $151.95 (34%)



New (25) Used (3) Refurbished (4)

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 107 reviews
Sales Rank: 875

Color: black
Media: Electronics
Memorabilia: No
Tracks: Unknown
Batteries Included: Yes
Native Resolution: 480 x 272
Display Size: 4.3
Includes MP3 Player: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 4
Dimensions (in): 4.6 x 0.9 x 3.3
nv:Type: Receiver
Display: LCD
Expansion Slots: SD Card
Battery Life: 5 hours
Special Features: Bluetooth
Special Features: FM Modulator
Special Features: RDS-TMC traffic compatible
Special Features: 4GB internal flash memory
Special Features: Integrated Microphones And Speaker

MPN: 1M00.980
Model: 1M00.980
UPC: 636926018319
EAN: 0636926018319
ASIN: B000VLHN9E

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 71-75 of 107
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5 out of 5 stars Tom Tom GO 920 GPS   April 20, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

For the price this unit is fantastic. Includes North America and most of Europe. Updating is simple. And a couple of routes I've taken with it are same as routes those in the know would take, rather than the route most would follow if using Thomas Bros. maps.
Good product, good price.



5 out of 5 stars Great Product   April 18, 2008
I have owned this for 3-4 months and Love it. I found this program called tomtom media center that allows you to play DVD and other forms on my tomtom 920.
Share map is great, some of the addresses in my town are off by a few houses, but a friend has a Garmin 760 that does the same thing. Garmin 760 is a good unit, but I liked the tomtom better for the other things like voice recognition and watching DVD's on it when waiting on someone.
I would buy it again and will recommend it to anyone



1 out of 5 stars TomTom is Poster Child for Bad Consumer Relations   April 11, 2008
 11 out of 12 found this review helpful

We have done some internet shopping and by far this is the worst experience ever with our purchase of a Tom Tom GO 920 portable GPS Vehicle Navigator. We tested the unit and it did all that it said it would, until we put it in the car and it fell of the windshield and cracked the screen. TomTom will do nothing except sell us another unit for $450. (the original unit was $460.) We have learned from others who purchased this unit that the larger screen is attached to the same mounting bracket as a smaller unit with no accommodation for the new model's heavier screen. The TT people were surley and offered no help to repair other than total replacement. We owned the unit for three days! And trying to get in further contact with TT, forget it...they are unavailable.


3 out of 5 stars Ok, not great   April 5, 2008
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Pretty much everything has been said before. Mount needs to be better. Also, voice entry didn't work. Cust support tries, but still doesn't work. Had updates and downgrades and still no solution. Would have liked all features to work as advertised right out of the box. Quality assurance or system verification leaves some to be desired. If I shipped SW basic functionality that didn't work I would loose my job.


3 out of 5 stars My Go 920 Experience Brooklyn, NY -> Burlington, VT   March 31, 2008
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

After much deliberation I finally decided to get the TomTom Go 920 w/ the and here is my review. I put the TT Go 920 up against my buddy's Garmin Streetpilot c550 on our ski trip to Vermont. My TT came with software v7.220 with the 700maps.

Go 920 and its features I love...

-The remote makes using the unit about 100% easier when having to do stuff on the road.
-POI's near my current location feature (Not on the garmin, as far as my buddy could tell.)
-Smoothness of the tracking on the maps.
-Horizon view shows an extremely accurate view of the roads coming up.
-Rock solid window mount
-Auto night mode
-Superfast (re)routing
-Great speaker
-Notify me when certain category of POIs are coming up.
(In downloaded a POI list of all brewerys in the world and through it on and set a warning for Homer Simpson's "mmm, Beer" to play. However I would love to be able to tap the POI icon as it comes up in the map or in the right hand corner when it blinks and have it give me the information about that POI. Not details, but just the name of it. In order to see it you have to go to menu, POIs near me, and then (in my case) click the brewpub category.

Things the Garmin did way better than the TomTom...

-TTS on the Garmin was much better than that of the TomTom. (I tried both Kate and Susan) Example... when on I-91 the TT would pronounce it nah-eee-n-tee-one. When approaching any bridges the TT would say Brooklyn Branch or Triboro "Branch" instead of bridge. Come on now. Also, the Garmin would read to you the POIs name to you upon reaching it.
-Actual directions. The Garmin would warn your earlier about when to get over to the exit and actually say the exit number to get off. "Exit ramp at Exit 14 (exit name)" opposed to TT's "14 (exit name)"
-Tell you which side of the street your destination is on.
-The Garmin would actually warn you when your battery was getting low, the TT just stops and shows the battery low screen.
-When waiting at light with the road we are supposed to turn on in front of us leaving a shopping center the TT would tell me I was already on the street I should be on, where the Garmin would show us perpendicular to the road we were supposed to turn on.
-Sign notifications were easier to read. The Garmin would show you your next move prominently on the screen I-89 to I-91

Other things I noticed about the TT

When trying to route from Burlington to Smugglers Notch (our ski resort of choice) the TomTom tried to take us on a road that is closed during the winter months do to snow. I tried to mark the road as closed but it told me it could not. I presume this was because we were driving on the road for a good 20 miles already and couldn't just mark a section of it closed to upload to mapshare.

I just couldn't get my Blackberry 8700 to pair up for data on the TomTom, no matter how many settings I have tried. Handsfree pairing was a breeze though.

Now for a weird anomaly which I am not sure if other TT users have reported. I noticed that if I had my TT unplugged and about 5 minutes before the low battery screen would come on, you would start hearing weird cracking sounds coming from the speaker. Almost like there was an electrical short. Like the sound of unplugging one end of a speaker cable from the source and touching it to metal. Normal? I don't think so...

Oh yeah, what the heck is Car Preferences? It's always grayed out in the preferences screen.

Notes: I have done the same exact trip many times, however this was my first GPS assisted one.

If you think you wont like the TomTom maps because it doesn't anti-alias like the Garmin does and its maps have less detail, DO NOT worry. I got annoyed by the extra roads at times the Garmin would display. (You can always reduce the level of detail on the Garmin though.) Surprisingly I like the map view on the TomTom much better than Garmin's.

**UPDATE**
After testing out several GPS's, in NYC they all say Branch instead of bridge. This does not represent a problem with the GPS itself, however from the Test-to-Speech software that a lot of GPS manufacturers use. The software vendor that provides the voices is Loquendo. I would like to think that the GPS manufacturers would know of this and tell Lequendo to fix their voices to properly speak the words correctly.


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