Whats the cheapest in car gps sat nav on the market?



Answers:
Try:
http://www.ebuyer.com/uk/store/sat-nav?g.

They seem to have Garmin for about 100 quid which is very reasonable. The company itself seems to show up fine on my Trustwatch Toolbar.

Also, I've just checked, the Garmin Street Pilot i3 (£124.99 eBuyer) has downloadable Safety and Speed camera data, POI (Points of Interest like ATMs, Restraunts, Petrol Staions etc.) . It got a 4 Star Rating from Personal Computer World Magazine, and seems to be an excellent deal. You could always go to Currys or something and try it out but buy on the web as it around £50 cheaper.

Hope this helps.
makro. £99





however i dont think it works in areas of scotland on national kilt day.
The cheapest isnt a good idea to buy, as it wont have functions like knowing where speed cameras, traffic lights, bank machines, etc are.
The cheapest method for positioning is a girlfriend with a map. Not very reliable, prone to breakdowns but cheap in the short term. Long term these can be expensive to run.
A stolen one? Well you asked LOL
$150 us
Cheap is not always the best route. however £99 in Halfords will get you a Navman all-in-one GPS. OR NavSure 200. Check out the on line offers on their website. All the best!

Oh, I can recommend TomTom Go! Slightly more expensive but amazing features and easy of use.

The answers post by the user, for information only, UKQnA.com does not guarantee the right.

  • Cheap Samsung D600??
  • i have been offerered a good contract deal with three newtwork on the sony ericsson K800i, is the phone good?
  • any one know electrics and the law?
  • can anyone tell me how to acsess deleted text messages from sim card and if you can do this from my PC?
  • Which mobile phone shall I buy?
  • Digital camera: Singapore or Hong Kong?
  • O2 MOBILE .. how do i find out my mobile number? NO CREDIT IN PHONE?
  • Is there a UK product support e-mail address for Goodmans (who make electricals, e.g. TVs)?
  • Can anyone recommend a 32 HDTV around £700 to £800 or less. In the U.K.?