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TomTom GO 720 4.3-Inch Widescreen Bluetooth Portable GPS Navigator

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 Location:  Home » GPS » Navigation Systems » TomTom GO 720 4.3-Inch Widescreen Bluetooth Portable GPS NavigatorNovember 18, 2008  
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TomTom GO 720 4.3-Inch Widescreen Bluetooth Portable GPS Navigator
TomTom GO 720 4.3-Inch Widescreen Bluetooth Portable GPS Navigator

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Brand: TomTom
Category: CE

List Price: $449.95
Buy New: $319.95
You Save: $130.00 (29%)



New (7) Used (3) Refurbished (4) from $234.98

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 164 reviews
Sales Rank: 2125

Media: Electronics
Memorabilia: No
Tracks: Unknown
Batteries Included: No
Native Resolution: 480 x 272
Display Size: 4.3
Includes MP3 Player: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 3.2 x 0.9 x 4.7

MPN: 1M00.780
Model: 1M00.780
UPC: 636926017114
EAN: 0036926017112
ASIN: B000SATCUQ

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 136-140 of 164
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5 out of 5 stars Worth The Wait   December 9, 2007
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

I was looking for a navigator that works flawlessly with a MACOSX operating system. I read a couple reviews and found that the TomTom Home software was updated to run and update the TomTom GO properly. The TomTom GO 720 works flawlessly with my MAC mini running Leopard. I installed the TomTom Home software and got the updated software in a couple of minutes which allowed the TomTom GO to connect to the Sats. easier. Setting up the preferences was very user friendly, a breeze. The menus takes a little time to get familiar but in time I was skipping through and personalizing it to fit my usage. The built in speakers are great. I like the FM transmitter mode, however the hissing on those blank FM stations are annoying so I use the built in which is clear and loud enough. I love the blue tooth mode for hands free phone conversation. You don't have to shout for this baby to hear you. This is one of my favorite features because I hate blue tooth headphones or holding a phone to my head while driving. The navigations works excellent. I would recommend this to anyone, young or old.


4 out of 5 stars Best of the New GPS Offerings, But...   December 8, 2007
 52 out of 52 found this review helpful

I own and actually have used (each, during thousands of miles of auto travel) a Lowrance iWay 350, Garmin 60Csx handheld, Garmin Nuvi 200, Magellan Maestro 4040, a 2007 Chrysler OEM in-dash navigation unit, and now a TomTom 720.

The TomTom 720 is one cool unit. I just finished a 4000 mile cross-country test trip. It has features that stand out: Blazing fast satellite acquisition, as instant as the superb Garmin Nuvi 200; a status bar that is complete (with variables such as ETA, Distance to Destination, Time to Destination, Time of Arrival, current time, and current speed) and is customizable as to map screen location and data inclusion/exclusion. I consider the status bar an important feature of any auto GPS and never have understood why the Magellan and Garmin units lack key trip data displays on their map screens. Perhaps it is a design consideration by these makers in weighing Highway use versus City Driving use. I suspect most GPS units are bought and used by local-area drivers with little need for these trip data.

The TomTom720 graphics are as colorful and bright as the Gamin Nuvi series' with one additional feature: superb highway interchange and exit graphics that actually depict bridges (driving under overpasses!) and all surrounding ramps. The TomTom features the best highway ramp information and guidance of any unit I have used (above). The excellent 3D graphics' flow is smooth, and doesn't digitally blotch up going around curves. The graphics are simply superior. By the way, voice guidance is detailed, suitably anticipatory, and redundant, again superior to any of the other brands I have used.

TomTom routing was generally excellent. Only one time did the unit get confused about the location of a segment of Highway 80 in Wyoming, which did appear to recently have been resurfaced and perhaps relocated. The Garmin Nuvi 200 ranks absolutely last (of all my units) on routing, constantly recalculating a route that should have been and is a straight interstate highway shot. This to me indicates out-of-date maps. In the Garmin Nuvi 200 there is no way to stop the constant rerouting in these instances.

Finally, the menus and POI's. The TomTom 720 suffers from too many layers of menus for routine items (brightness of screen, for example). The menu items are somewhat confusing as well. The POI's are adequate, their listings complete. Although the POI's on the Magellan unit, whose database is tied to AAA information, was far superior; and in fact the entire POI feature set of the 4040 is superior to that of any unit listed here. Unfortunately, my Magellan Maestro 4040 crapped out after 10 hours use.

The TomTom unit has one of the fastest and easiest to use address-find systems. And, its calculation and routing computational feature is very quick and robust. Certainly, it is as quick as the Garmin Nuvi unit which is also lightning fast.

I do not and did not use or test any of the Bluetooth and MP3 features. To me, their inclusion is feature bloat.

After I attached my unit to the internet and to TomTom Home, it automatically updated current software and MapShare information to my unit, although it is difficult to determine from the download what was actually corrected, if anything. MapShare is not a web site as you might think, but merely an upload process descriptor, and the user data are apparently treated and vetted by TomTom in some manner before actually being broadcast downloaded to all users who ask for the corrections (you can opt out or in a number of ways).

I found the speedometer readout on the map screen very useful, because on my return trip I had switched to snow tires that were 65R18 instead of the specified 60R18. This resulted in an erroneous odometer reading that was actually too high since the tire was rotating too many turns per mile for the car`s computer setting. As a result, I was driving too fast and not knowing it; I slowed down a couple of miles per hour from 75 to 73 (as indicated on my odometer) until the TomTom read 75. I would never have realized this problem without the speedometer readout on the TomTom. This feature probably saved me a speeding ticket or two.

Negatives: Compared to the Nuvi series, which I consider among the best of the units I own, diminished only by the constant and annoying rerouting during highway driving, the fonts on the map screen of the TomTom are small and wording can be somewhat hard to read, especially considering the short mount provided. (Buy an optional longer windshield mount to bring the unit closer.)

More troubling is the algorithm that computes Time to Arrival (therefore 4 stars). The TomTom 720 was consistently 15% higher on estimated Time to Arrival, compared to all of the units above, except the Magellan 4040, which was about 5% high. These numbers are based on a trip that is standard for me and whose distance and time I have verified many times with actual numbers. The TomTom's displayed Distance to Destination (miles) figure, however, was spot on with the actual distance traveled. It should be noted, that just like the Magellan 4040, the TomTom will shorten up its Time to Arrival as you approach your destination. So, at your destination both units will read accurately (that is, show no time remaining).

All in all, if you don't do a lot of long distance driving then the overstated times are of little concern. Then, the TomTom 720 should be among your top choices for a vehicle GPS unit. TomTom got it mostly right. Now if only it would automatically display the correct time for whatever time zone you are driving through. Still, the TomTom 720 is the very best of all of the GPS units I own or have used.


Update: Yesterday, December 24, 2007, I completed a 600 mile roundtrip to the Monterey, CA area, typically a five to five and a half hour trip one way (elapsed time, no stops added in). The 720 indicated this would be a 7 hour trip, an estimate 30%-40% high. It turned out to be a 5 hour 45 minute trip with a gas stop. At the midway point (150 miles) it was estimating three and a half hours. However, as we got closer to home, the time of arrival approached the actual time.

Perhaps I am too obsessive about trip computer data, but the other GPS units cited above seem to get it right and, frankly, it frustrates me on long drives.

Also, the 720 designed a route that called for traveling through the East Bay to get to US 101, and I usually take Interstate 280 and the Golden Gate Bridge. Unfortunately the 720 would not let change routes on the fly, and even though it recalculate routes very quickly it called for me to get off at every exit on 280 and head east, losing hours in the process. The 720 finally stopped reroute directions and calculations after I passed over the Golden Gate and was back on US101.




1 out of 5 stars Good if you don't mind seven-year-old maps.   December 2, 2007
 16 out of 25 found this review helpful

That's when the maps on my Go 720 (copyrighted in 2007) were last up-to-date: in 2000.

I bought this unit partly because it was supposed to be easy to update. That was, of course, before I discovered that it is impossible to update. The updated maps (2007) take up more memory than the unit has. They also don't fit on a 2 GB SD card (which as far as I can tell is the biggest card the device will support). It probably wouldn't be so big, but you have to download the whole of North America, to include Canada and Mexico.

So, for five-hundred dollars, I got seven-year-old maps that I can't upgrade. I probably could have bought a seven-year-old atlas for fiftey cents. I will be running back to Garmin now.



4 out of 5 stars Maybe I Don't Have High Expectations but I Love It!   November 28, 2007
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Hi, I just got my TomTom 720 yesterday and was able to use it that night when driving to a location in the suburbs that had limited lighting. It helps when you are unfamiliar with the location and not sure where the next street to turn is. Prior to me getting the TomTom 720, I would pass the street I should be looking for and then have to turn back around. For this, it is great! I also like the bluetooth capability with my phone though I wish the speakers were in front of the unit and not the back. I haven't used the iPod function yet but I'm hoping the functionality is useful.

I did find the an issue when I tried downloading the extras or maps. The other issue I noticed is when you are recording your own voice in the unit for the directions, it doesn't allow enough time to record each phrase.

Overall, I'm pretty happy about the unit.



5 out of 5 stars Excellent GPS PNG   November 20, 2007
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

After much research I settled on the 720. The Garmin 660 looked good but not good enough. The 720 is an excellent PND. The screen is very crisp and bright. Easy to see in the day and the visibility is not affected with polarized sunglasses. Some opine that it's not as bright as others. They where probably unaware that it not only switches to night colors at dark but can also dim the day colors when not in direct sunlight. Very customizable. Voices, colors, menus, just about everything can be set just so. Fast fix. Never has lost it's position. Very happy with it.

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