GARMIN NUVI 205W PORTABLE GPSPortable, cost-effective and wide, nüvi 205W is your individual travel assistant for life on the go. This navigator leads the way with turn-by-turn directions and optional MSN® Direct services to get you there on time and maintain you informed. It is packed with millions of destinations and maps for the contiguous U.S., Canada or regional sections of Europe. Like the rest of the sleek nüvi 2×5-series, the 205W is priced correct and ultra-straightforward to use.
See A lot more With nüvi 205W’s widescreen display, you’ll usually get the large picture. View map detail, driving directions, photos and much more in bright, brilliant color. Its sunlight-readable, 4.3″
With the nüvi 205W’s widescreen display, you’ll alwasys get the large picture. |
(10.92 cm) display is straightforward to read, from any direction.
Your personal travel assistant for life on the go. |
Navigate With Ease
Depending upon the version, nüvi 205W comes preloaded with City Navigator® NT map information for either the contiguous U.S., Canada or 1 European region or country (click versions tab to view all). Basically touch the color screen to enter a destination, and nüvi takes you there with turn-by-turn voice directions, 2-D or three-D maps and smooth map redraw rates as you navigate. Its digital elevation maps show you shaded contours at greater zoom levels, giving you a huge picture of the surrounding terrain. In addition, nüvi 205W 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. With HotFix® satellite prediction, nüvi calculates your position quicker to get you there quicker.
Take It With You
Like the rest of the nüvi 2×5-series, nüvi 205W sports a sleek, slim design and fits comfortably in your pocket or purse. Its rechargeable lithium-ion battery makes it convenient for navigation by car or foot. With its “Where Am I?” emergency locator, you always know your location. Simply tap the screen to get your exact latitude and longitude coordinates, the nearest address and intersection, and the closest hospitals, police stations and fuel stations.
Go Beyond Navigation
Navigation is just the beginning. nüvi 205W includes numerous travel tools such as JPEG picture viewer, world travel clock with time zones, currency converter, measurement converter, calculator and more. With photo navigation, you can download pictures from Garmin Connect™ Photos and navigate to them. The 205W is compatible with optional enhanced MSN® Direct content (subscription and receiver needed) and our no cost Garmin Garage™ where you can download animated vehicles that show your location on the map. It also comes with Garmin Lock™, an anti-theft feature. Enhance your travel knowledge with optional plug-in microSD™ cards such as Garmin Travel Guides for detailed information on attractions.
What’s in the Box
nüvi 205W, preloaded City Navigator® NT data for the lower 48 states, Hawaii and Puerto Rico (no Alaska or Canada detail), vehicle suction cup mount, vehicle power cable, and fast start manual.
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List Cost: $ 249.99
Cost: [wpramaprice asin="B0015F1L7A"]
Tags: 205W, 4.3Inch, Garmin, Navigator, nüvi, Portable, Widescreen —

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review by R. Toro “The Bull” for Garmin nüvi 205W 4.3-Inch Widescreen Portable
Very good ‘cheap’ GPS if looking for basic navigation,
I have had this unit for about 8 months. It has given me no problems what so ever. The bad thing about it for me is how basic it is. If you want bluetooth compatibility, traffic updates, movie times, etc on your GPS, then this is not the device for you. But if all you want is to get around and find places, then this unit will work well.
The price seems a little high right now for what it does ($180). For that price I would expect bluetooth compatibility. This unit does not say the road names, it just says turn left or turn right in 200 feet(not a big deal). When you look places up, it has their phone number and address (usually) which is nice because if its late at night, you can call first to see if they are still open.
This GPS has an SD card reader on the side, which can be used to view pictures in slideshow mode when you don’t need the unit for navigation.
The screen is very bright during the day, so you can easily see the screen. And a nice feature is that when it gets dark, the screen automatically changes colors to ‘night’ mode, which helps when driving at night (the screen dims and the bright white background colors change to dark blues and blacks).
The trip features are nice. It keeps track of your average speed, how long you spent moving, how long you spent stopped, total travel time, how many miles you’ve gone, etc.
It takes about a minute to a minute and a half to find your location from a cold start, but if you leave it powered all the time (with a car in which the cig lighter stays on when you turn the car off) it never loses the location (not sure if that is bad for it).
The battery life is very good (about 4-5 hours).
There are many add-ons that a technologically advanced person can add to it. Such as custom points of interest (you can download them or even make your own, and you can set alerts so that it warns you when you are close to a certain place or when you are speeding in a school zone). You can add different vehicle icons to use as the car on the screen.
Overall, it is a decent, but very basic navigation device. Not many bells or whistles, but it gets you from point A to point B well.
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|review by Brian Morris for Garmin nüvi 205W 4.3-Inch Widescreen Portable
Best I can find, but room for improvement,
I have owned a Garmin c320 for a few years now and was looking for some new features, like coordinates and altitude. I first bought the TomTom 330 XL, which was a disaster. After lots of research, I bought this and kept it. Here is my long list of pros and cons:
PROS:
1. Best routes. (See my cons) This may be one of the main reasons Garmin dominates in the US — good routing. Of course, I wish it had more a brain and could think about traffic lights and general traffic in certain areas at certain times (not actual traffic reporting), but I guess needing brains is good.
2. Where Am I? (See my cons) This will list your nearest street address. In this screen it also shows altitude and your coordinates.
3. Easier broad map access. On my c320, you had to dig in the menus to find a broad map view, so you could touch areas on the map and go to it. On the 205w, you can just touch the map while driving and it will take you to the broad map. You can then touch an area that you want to make a Via Point and change your route that way.
4. Speed Limit sign. You can set it up to show the current speed limit on the screen. It has been super accurate to the instant of a speed limit change in real driving. If the sign is missing on the screen, you also then know that it doesn’t really know how to calculate arrival time from the road. You may want to use that information to take or avoid that road on your next trip.
5. Very compact. My c320 was much bigger, so this is super small.
CONS:
1. Touchscreen. This may change as I use it, but the touchscreen is no where near as sensitive as my c320. It requires some hard touching. It also shows fingerprints much worse than my old GPS unit.
2. Ball mount. This gives a better range of motion than the mount on my c320, but it feels like I need to push really hard on my GPS unit to get it to snap in. This may change in age, too.
3. Keyboard speed. When I’m typing in a city, street, etc., the keyboard is a full QWERY keyboard, which is an improvement over my c320 (I think you can choose ABC keyboard), but there are two things I don’t like: 1) there is a delay from when you type to when it shows, so if you type fast, you can’t see what you’re typing, if you make a mistake, you don’t see if very fast; 2)the spacebar is tiny and way off to the right, while dumb menus are in the bottom middle — very annoying!!
4. Charging cord. On my c320, the charging cord would plug into the mount and there wasn’t a charge jack in the GPS unit itself. This was nice because you could leave the power cord in the mount all the time and take the GPS with you – you never had to plug in, just clip the GPS in and out. Now, the power cord won’t stay put and it falls out the door, etc. because it must be plugged into the back of the GPS. I suppose with the mount the way it is, it’s not possible to have a jack in the mount and GPS, but I think they should work on that.
5. Current road. The TomTom XL 330 did show what road you are currently on and what the next road to turn onto was. Garmin only shows the next road name.
6. Routing pet peeve. Sometimes I won’t want to take its routing because I know of a better way. Let’s say I turn off of the normal route — it will recalculate and have a shorter time than before I turned. What’s up with that? Why didn’t it take me that way to begin with?
6. Routing choices. I don’t like the fact that I can choose either Fastest Time or Shortest Route. I would imagine that some of the time, the best route would be in between those to extremes.
7. Missing POIs. There are just so many cases where I’ll be looking for something and it’s not in the Garmin — even for stores and restaurants open for years. I know you’ll have this will all GPS units, but for the #1 seller in the US, can’t they figure out a way to get the users involved? How about incentives for users to fix problems online and give them discounts on map updates? If you have the best maps and POIs by far, why would anyone buy any other company?
8. Tinny speaker. I’m not impressed with the speaker, it is much worse sounding than the deep c320, but you can hear it. It’s just not pleasant.
9. Voice choices. It would be nice to choose your voice, but I don’t see that option, unless you choose another language.
10. Nearest intersection. This is within the “Where Am I” place in the menu. It could be very useful in an emergency to have the nearest intersection in addition to the nearest address. However, I’ve found that they should have labeled it, “random intersection within a few miles.” It will generally show me a major intersection, and sometimes ignore dozens of closer small intersections that would be much more beneficial to the police, fire,…
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