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OVERALL RATING
SCORE: 92
GRADE: A-
The Garmin Approach G3 is the latest Garmin-branded golf GPS device, and delivers everything that the predecessor Garmin Approach G5 unit does, in a littler package and with a lower price. “Breathtaking. I shall call him…Mini-Me.”
The G3 is a solid unit (maybe a little too solid when you slip it into your pocket, since in spite of it is little size, it’s still comparatively heavy at 5.35 ounces – compare this to the Callaway uPro at 3.1 ounces). Like the G5, it suffers from one of the difficulties inherent with touchscreens, which is that it may be difficult to accurately pinpoint your desired targets (particularly if you have big fingers), but the touchscreen likewise makes navigating amongst the G3′s dissimilar features simple and intuitive. Garmin’s use of illustrations of holes, as opposed to actual satellite photographs, is in truth starting to grow on us – the illustrations are much more brilliant than photographs, and are therefore viewable in all light conditions. An added bonus is that the Gamin Approach G3 requires perfectly no set-up time at all, with all courses pre-loaded on the device.
One of our few complaints is that we wish the device had the capacity to track stats – an ominous oversight for a premium device. And while we’re nit-picking, the combining of the G3′s bulky shape and weight make it a bit of a brick in your pocket. A 20% littler and lighter brick than the G5, but a brick nonetheless.
Pros:
- Matches the G5 with the best user interface we tested
- Can determine the distance to any point on a hole
- No set-up required – courses are all pre-loaded
- No fee for access to the course database
Cons:
- No tracking of any stats (fairways hit, GIR, putts, sand saves, et al)
- When the user touches the screen to determine a habit point, the pre-marked points are not viewable
- Course availability still lags a bit
- Short battery life
Retail price: $349.99
SETUP
SCORE: 100
GRADE: A+
The Good: The Garmin Approach G3 scores a perfective 100 for setup – all the user does is install a pair of AA batteries (not included) and turn on the device. Courses are pre-loaded so no downloads are necessary.
The Bad: Absolutely nothing.
Details:
- Required Steps. None – there isn’t anything that the user needs to do. Garmin’s web internetsite provides a free application (the WebUpdater) that may be downloaded to the user’s computer – once the Garmin Approach G3 is connected to the computer with a USB cable, WebUpdater must mechanically find the latest software and sync it to the device. In addition, Garmin has promised to make periodic updates to the course database available for free from it is web site.
- Time Required for Setup. None, other than the time it takes you to find a pair of batteries.
What’s in the Box: The Garmin Approach G3 comes with:
- USB cable
- Quick Start Guide
- Belt Clip
Required Downloads:
COURSE AVAILABILITY
SCORE: 79
GRADE: C+
Critical Golf Test: Garmin keeps adding courses to it is database, now scoring 79% in our course coverage test. Unfortunately, that still keeps it as second to last amongst it is competitors. An encouraging sign for Garmin is that it is course availability is now within striking distance of the other appliances that also display overhead hole maps (illustrations or satellite photographs).
Manufacturer’s Claims: Garmin claims to have over 12,000 courses in the database, which presently places them tied for last in our course coverage comparison test.
EASE OF USE
SCORE: 95
GRADE: A
The Good: Nice simple interface to access dissimilar features. Courses are all stored on the device, so the user doesn’t have to determine which ones to swap on or off of the device’s memory. The touchscreen makes finding distances to a purposed point (as well as the distance from that point to the middle of the green) as easy as touching the screen and moving a cross-hair over the desired point.
The Bad: Pre-marked distances are not viewable while the user is using the touchscreen to determine a habit distance. While targeting a desired point your finger may block the view of the cross-hair and distance. Two words of counsel to Garmin Approach G3 purchasers: rechargeable batteries. We held getting a warning screen that the battery power was “too low for full backlight”, even when the battery meter was showing amid 1/2 and 3/4 of a charge remaining.
Details:
- Buttons. The Garmin Approach G3 only has a single button, the power button, which powers the device on/off if kept for a few seconds, or if pressed briefly when the device is on, will display a screen showing the date/time, a battery meter, and a button to touch to lock the screen. All other data and controls are accessed through the touchscreen. The interface on the touchscreen is intuitive, and the ways to access dissimilar functions are without doubt or question labeled.
- Screen. The color screen is bright, and we had no problem looking at it in sunny conditions. The G3′s screen size is with regards to 20% littler than the G5, but we didn’t observe any divergence in usability.
- Touchscreen Sensitivity. We had a bit more of a problem with the touchscreen of the Garmin Approach G3 than we did with the G5 – on occasion, we had to push a button multiple times before it would activate. This is more of a minor aggravation than a tragic flaw. We note that we still had the occasional issue with the device without intention advancing to new screens or new holes when jostled around in a pocket. You may solve this by clicking on the power button to move to the “standby” screen, but that then necessitates hitting a button when you want to get back to the display of the hole.
- Form Factor. The device comes in at 5.35 ounces, making the G3 one of the heavier GPS gimmicks we tested. The length and width of the Garmin Approach G3 are actually rather compact. Unfortunately, it’s a thick little sucker – while it is length and width are comparable to a Callaway uPro, it is fundamentally twice as thick.
- Starting a Round. After powering up the G3, the user needs to manually select the desired course. Courses are listed in order of proximity to the current location. Once a course is selected, the device defaults to displaying the initial hole of the course – if you are playing just the back nine or in a shotgun start, you have to manually press the “>>” button multiple times to advance to the applicable starting hole.
- Battery Life. Battery life is comparatively short, altho we were competent to make it through two rounds before the batteries died. The device does mechanically reduce the luminance of the screen after one minute of inactivity to conserve battery life. One actually annoying glitch – when the G3 batteries are near the threshold charge level for triggering a warning screen that battery power is insufficient for full backlighting, the device seems to ofttimes modify it is mind with regards to whether there in truth is sufficient power or not…and thus, it will re-display the warning screen 2 seconds after it just showed it to you and then again…and again. Once the charge level drops comfortably under that threshold, the problem seems to go away.
COURSE DETAIL AND MAPPING
SCORE: 94
GRADE: A
The Good: The capacity to determine the distance to any point and to pinpoint the precise position of a target on the green provides tremendous flexibility, and Garmin complements this with pre-marked distances to a heap of applicable hazards and targets. The view of the green rotates based upon where the user is standing in hole view.
The Bad: Fairly random as to when distances to hazards are displayed – distances to points may appear and then vanish as you approach them, or may only appear once you are so close to them that the distance is irrelevant.
Details:
- Views. The Garmin Approach G3 provides two main views – a “hole view” that shows an overhead illustration of the hole, and a “green view” concentered on the green and surrounding area.
- Hole view – The Garmin will mechanically zoom in on the hole view as the user marches closer to the green. There are a number of “levels” of zoom on the hole view – ranging from the entire hole when users are on the tee box, to just the green and surroundings. The user may likewise manually zoom by touching the screen, moving the cross-hair to the desired area, and then touching the “zoom” button (there is only one level of zoom available when manually zooming). When targeting a point with the cross-hair, the cross-hair and distance to the aimed point will most likely be blocked by your finger. However, when you lift your finger from the screen both the cross-hair and distance will still be displayed (until you select “Done”).
The distance displayed at the top of the screen is to the center of the green or wherever the user has placed the flagstick within the “green view”, below. When you select a point the distance will be modified to be the total distance from your current emplacement to the chosen point plus the distance from that point to the flagstick. The distance at the top of the screen is not, as it is with a lot of golf GPS devices, either the distance to the purposed point or the distance as the crow flies to the center of the green.
Garmin has pre-marked the distances to a good deal of hazards and targets, but in hole view it is from time to time difficult to determine what point the distance refers – whether the distance displayed is the distance to reach a bunker or the distance to clear the bunker. Thankfully, in a lot of of the zoomed views, the hazards are enlarged sufficient that both distances to reach a hazard and to clear a hazard are displayed. We can’t figure out Garmin’s system of belief on displaying distances – Garmin has already marked the key hole targets, so why not show the distances to more of them? The graphics of the hazards are nicely detailed, altho there are galore minor issues, as bunkers were often shown as overlapping in graphics when in reality they had gaps of approximately 5 feet amidst them. The view of the hole and green will carry on to rotate based on the player’s position to the green, which is a nice feature.
The hole view always displays the hole number and par.
- Green view – Shows the shape of the green, and allows the user to touch any point on the green to indicate the flagstick position. Once the user modifies the flagstick position it will keep this position for the hole, so if the user returns to the hole view the distances will be relative to this altered flagstick location. This view likewise shows the distance from the user to distances on and around the green (the view will not proceed to rotate based on player position once the user has moved to green view). One of the most thoughtful features of Garmin’s gimmicks is that their green views show sufficient of the surrounding area (bunkers, et al) that users may effortlessly determine where they are relative to the green. This may sound simple, but the challenge of a lot of of the widgets is that when the user is standing at the side of the green, and sees a picture of just the green (out of context), with distances to the “bottom” of the green and the “top” of the green, it ofttimes isn’t clear if the “bottom” reading is the point on the green nearest to the user, or to the tee box. Furthermore, some times the only way the user knows that the green has been rotated is if they know the shape of the green exceedingly well – which is in general not the case on a course that a user is playing for the initial time. Our last comment, which parallels those when it comes to the hole view, is that the device isn’t consistent in which points it will show – the near and far points of the green are not always what is displayed (we presume that Garmin chooses to only plot a fixed number of points around the perimeter of the green).
- Hole Information. The hole number and par are visible on the “hole view” screen. Hole handicap is not available.
- Custom Mapping. Garmin Approach G3 users cannot add and save their own points to the map. This isn’t a big issue since emplacement to any point may be determined, but as noted above, it would be nice to have more outstanding selective information on distances to sure hazards in the overhead view.
Suggestion Box: The hole view is an artist’s rendition of the hole, rather than a photograph. The gain of this is that the effigy is much more magnificent than a satellite photo. But it does leave galore doubt as to whether each applicable hazard is displayed – specially trees. Garmin lists a lot of courses as showing “tree cover”, but we would like to see this become usual on their course maps.
It would also be helpful if Garmin provided more distances to pre-mapped points in hole view. We encountered a big number of holes where distances either to hazards or to clear hazards from the tee box were not provided, and numerous pre-marked distances only appeared long after the selective information was utile (in one case once we were within 20 yards of the point).
Finally, while we liked the flexibleness in the green view to move the flagstick to any point on the green (and receive distances to that repositioned flagstick), we once in a while found ourselves pulling out the G3 and finding that while it was jostled regarding in our pocket, it had bumbled along into the green view and repositioned the flagstick. When that happened, we couldn’t find any way to restore the flagstick to the default position in the center of the green (other than by exiting the round, which will erase all of your scores). We were left necessitating to manually nudge it back to the center of the green on our own.
FEATURES
SCORE: 92
GRADE: A-
The Good: A solid grouping of utile features that are executed well. Plus it’s waterproof!
The Bad: There is no capacity to record statistics, nor may the user alter any settings for the duration of the course of their round.
Details:
- Shot Tracking. The Garmin Approach G3 has a simple interface for tracking shots. The touchscreen actually shines on these types of features, since very specific buttons may be devised and changed depending on the screen that is displayed. Also, the user may leave the shot tracking screen to utilise a dissimilar feature and then return – the device will still proceed tracking the shot distance. Note that users cannot indicate which clubs were applied for a given shot, which a heap of widgets grant so they may calculate intermediate club distances.
- Score and Statistics. Again, the Garmin Approach G3 succeeds in presenting a basic interface for keeping score. The user goes to the scorecard, touches a column next to the applicable hole, and is staged a keypad with multiple numbers – the user just touches the applicable number. The device allows the user to enter names (which are also easy to type in with the touchscreen) to track the scoring of everyone in the foursome. The scoring screen will show each player’s current score relative to par, and the user may touch the name of a player to scroll through their scorecard. The Garmin Approach G3 will always save your scorecard from your last round of golf – when you get started a new round it replaces the former scorecard.
One nice feature is that by touching the par listed for a hole, the user may edit the par – handy on courses where there are dissimilar scores for par depending on which tee box is utilized. Unfortunately, the device does not track stats for fairways hit, greens hit in regulation, or putts.
- Auto-advance. The user may choose whether the device will mechanically advance to the next hole or require the user to manually advance.
- Course Storage. All courses come pre-loaded on the Approach G3, so users never have to worry when it comes to whether they’ve loaded the rectify courses on to the device before leaving the house.
- Preferences. The Garmin Approach G3 has a fixed set of adaptable preferences: measurement unit (yards vs. meters); battery type (alkaline, lithium or rechargeable NiMH) and auto-advance (automatic vs. manual). These predilections may only be viewed or modified prior to starting the round – the user other than as supposed or expected must quit the current round, which will erase any scores that were recorded for the duration of play.
ACCURACY
SCORE: 93
GRADE: A-
We tested the Garmin Approach G3 on a potpourri of courses and found the accuracy readings to be within 3-4 yards of sprinkler head markings and our laser readings. This was a bit better than we experienced with the G5, but we suspect that we just had lousy satellite reception on the days we were testing the G5, since we presume that the two widgets portion incisively the same course maps and GPS chipset. One thing we liked is that the G3 proceeds to provide distance readings no matter how close the user is to the target, not similar to a great deal of competing devices.
COST / VALUE
SCORE: 92
GRADE: A-
Retail Price: At a retail price of $349.99, the Garmin Approach G3 comes in beneath the typical price point of $399.99 for competitory appliances with hole views, such as the Callaway uPro, SkyCaddie SGX, OnPar and Golf Guru 4.
Fees for Access to Course Database: An further and added bonus for the G3 is that there are no fees for access to Garmin’s course database.
Three-Year Total Cost of Ownership: Since there is no cost for access to the course database, the three-year total cost of ownership of the Garmin Approach G3 is $349.99 (the cost of the device itself), which makes it one of the less pricey gimmicks in our cost comparison of golf GPS devices.
Value: The Garmin Approach G3 gets a strong value rating, delivering the wealth of features that we loved in it is huge brother, the G5, but for $100 less. Our definition of “value” is getting the most for your cash – with the G3, you get a premium golf GPS device with a rich feature set at an beautiful price, and with no fees for access to the course database. Go to the head of the class!
Garmin Approach G5 Universal Case Image
Garmin Approach G5 Universal Case Photo
Garmin Approach G5 Universal Case Image
Garmin Approach G5 Universal Case Picture
Garmin Approach G5 Universal Case Picture
Garmin Approach G5 Universal Case Image
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