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The nuvi 710, 760, and 770 support Bluetooth and can be paired to your mobile phone to become a hands-free device. As an added bonus, you can combine the Bluetooth with the nuvi 760's FM transmitter for hands-free calling via your car's stereo system.
When you receive an incoming call while your phone is paired with the nuvi 760, the nuvi displays an "Incoming Call" alert, which also displays the name/number of the caller. You can then tap Answer of Ignore, and use the internal microphone on the front of the nuvi 760 as a hands-free speakerphone.
The nuvi also supports a number of useful in-call features, such as call-waiting, transferring the call back to your cell phone, and muting the microphone.
If you're navigating to a destination, the nuvi silences all navigation prompts for the duration of the phone call (but still displays the map and visual prompts), and then resumes audible prompts once that call has ended.

Figure 80: Accessing the Bluetooth Menu
Before you can make use of any Bluetooth features, you'll need to pair the nuvi 760 with a Bluetooth enabled cell phone. In order to pair the phone and GPS, the two devices must be within 30 feet of each other.
Garmin has a website setup where you can check to see if your mobile phone is compatible with the nuvi 760: www.garmin.com/bluetooth, and see which features will work with any given phone.
I had no trouble pairing a Blackberry 8800 as well as an Apple iPod.
To begin the pairing process, make sure Bluetooth is enabled on your phone, then tap Tools > Settings > Bluetooth, as shown above in figure 80.

Figure 81: Bluetooth Menu
Tap Add to begin searching to Bluetooth devices within range of the nuvi 760.

Figure 82: Don't Forget to Turn on Bluetooth on Your Cell Phone
Before the nuvi begins searching for devices, it politely reminds you to make sure the phone's Bluetooth is turned on and set to discoverable.

Figure 83: Nearby Devices
Within about 30 seconds or so my Blackberry 8800 showed up on the nuvi's Nearby Devices screen, shown above. Tap OK to continue the pairing process.

Figure 84: Phone Passkey
When the nuvi attempts to connect to your cell phone, you'll need to enter a passkey -- after all, you don't want anyone in the world to be able to connect to your phone. The cell phone will alert you that a device is attempting to connect, and prompt you to enter the passkey. Enter 1-2-3-4 when prompted on the cell phone to complete the pairing process.

Figure 85: Ready to Make Phone Calls
Once the phone and nuvi have been successfully paired, the "Ready to Make Phone Calls" message is displayed.

Figure 86: Main Menu With Phone Feature Enabled
Now that we've successfully paired a cell phone to the nuvi 760 via Bluetooth, the phone icon now appears on the Main Menu.

Figure 87: Phone Menu
The nuvi 760 can access the phone book and call history on your cell phone, as well as lookup and dial Points of Interest, call the saved home phone number, use voice dial (provided your phone and carrier support this feature), or dial a number using the on-screen keypad.
Each time your cell phone connects to the nuvi, the phone book is automatically downloaded. Note that it may take a few seconds before the Phone Book icon appears, as the nuvi must finish downloading the phone book before it appears.

Figure 88: Calling a POI
When looking up a POI via the Phone menu, the large green Go! button is replaced by the Dial button, shown above.
When looking up a POI via the normal address entry page, the regular green Go! button remains, but a small telephone icon also appears on the POI details page that allows the nuvi to call the POI directly from that screen.

Figure 89: nuvi's Dial Pad
You can also tap Dial from the Phone Menu to use nuvi's on-screen dial pad. This can also be handy for voicemail systems, banks, or any other telephone system that requires you to enter numbers and passcodes.

Figure 90: Accessing Your Phone's Call Logs
Once paired with your phone, the nuvi can access the call logs on your cell phone via the Call History button from the Phone Menu (shown in figure 87).

Figure 91: Setting the Home Phone Number
The Call Home icon on the Phone Menu is a handy shortcut for quickly dialing the stored home phone number.

Figure 92: Phone Status
Tapping on Status from the Phone Menu displays the screen shown above in figure 92. It can be useful to view the remaining battery life and/or cellular reception on your phone. Note that this battery indicator is displaying the battery life of the connected cell phone, and not the nuvi.
Overall the hands-free speakerphone quality on the nuvi was acceptable but not fantastic. Things were fine when calling from a parked car, but the internal speaker isn't loud enough to hear callers when traveling at highway speeds. And when using the nuvi's FM transmitter to broadcast sound over the vehicle's stereo system, callers complained of hearing their own echo.
The echo effect that callers sometimes hear seemed to go away when I used an external microphone. Garmin sells a microphone for around $15 that connects to the nuvi 760's cradle. Callers reported that my voice was clearer when using this optional microphone and that they no longer heard their own echo when talking.