This was posted 13 years 5 months 10 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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$189 for a TomTom XXL 540M GPS Delivered to Your Door ($299 value)

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Highlights
TomTom XXL 540M GPS personal navigation device
Extra wide anti-glare touch screen
Advanced 3D lane guidance to negotiate busy intersections
Unique smart routes technology considers peak hour, traffic lights, zebra crossings and more to guarantee the fastest trip every time
Handy pre-loaded maps with map share technology
Spoken street names
Speed camera alerts
User-friendly Fold and Go EasyPort mount
USB cable
Car charger
Redemption code for Lifetime Maps

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closed Comments

  • Delivered to Your Door

    more than likely you'll have to pick it up from your local post office…

    many couriers don't bother knocking these days…

    • +7

      Looks like customer service delivery is…

      (sunglasses on)

      headed in the wrong direction.

      YEEEEAAAAAAHHHHHHHHH!!!

  • I feel like these things are gonna die out soon; I've seen the prices dropping like crazy over the last year or so.

    Anyway, good deal for this one, though, especially since it's XXL.

  • -6

    need to registered to look, not good.

    • +2

      Did you try clicking on the "already registered" button? It let me see it just fine.

      Great reason for a neg.

  • -2

    Was this $99 at DSE a while back, I can't see why this is a bargain

  • +5

    I think the previous best deal was this one - TomTom XXL 540 GPS with Bonus Case $149:

    http://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/39911

    • Yip, I bought this not too long ago at $149, bit cheaper than this one…

  • I just picked up the garmin 1490t from Dick Smith Fountain Gate yesterday for $199. The garmin has 5" screen, bluetooth, traffic (if thats worth anything) and a Micro sd slot for expansion. They had a few left.

  • i got this from DSE for 149 too WITH a BONUS case few months ago so this is bad deal

  • Notice the deal back in DSE, but thats just a XXL 540 model without lifetime map update. Prefer to have lifetime map update for 30bucks extra. I have a older GPS which works perfectly fine but a map update is about 100bucks.

  • +1

    With Tom Tom selling your personal Data to the higest bidder, I wouldn't touch them with a ten foot stick
    http://www.smh.com.au/digital-life/cartech/outrage-over-tomt…

  • Does anyone who has one, found any glaring problems with it? Does it work in the city at all?

    • If you live in Brisbane it will take you out of your way to take you through Clem7. I figured they must have made some sort of deal with them, and this just reinforces that.

    • As long as i select that i dont want to go through any tolls (ie the Clem7) its fine for me (Brisbane city driving)

      • So you can still (sometimes?) get a signal in the city where there are heaps of tall buildings? I have heard Navmans fail pretty badly in that regard.

        • I have never had a problem driving around in the city and not picking up a signal. Only problem i have ever encountered is the slow response time when you turn it on to pick up where you currently are.
          P.S. Yes, i also have a glare problem, hard to find the right angle to get out of sun and still be able to see it.

  • Like this idea of downloadable google maps? GPS companies won't be too pleased.
    http://gadgetwise.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/07/08/new-google-ma…

    • you can click a location and download a map covering a 10-mile radius around that location.
      The offline maps do not have all the features of the standard Google maps: You cannot get directions from place to place, look at a satellite view, or search for places nearby. But even without the interactive features, the maps could come in handy in a pinch.

      So you only get 10 miles per download, no turn by turn navigation, spoken directions or searching for locations.

      I do not see GPS companies getting too upset.

      • The purpose of that is to simply have a map of the area. Say you were travelling in a foreign city you would dl a few map areas before leaving your hotel over wifi.

        Google navigation is what you're thinking of and for a free piece of software it's pretty damn good. So long as you had a connection when you set the route it caches your entire route at the start. True it's given me some oddball routes but you get what you pay for.

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