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........ The 3790 Sg/My and the 3790 EU/UU look practically the same device. ........
Externally at least they seem very similar. The SG/MY does additionally have an external socket for headphones i think.
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Neil, I can't show the PCB P/N table in the hidden content, I don't know why. Can you provide me with the list?
Are you looking in the correct "hidden content"? Hold the battery symbol on the main 'Where To?/View Map' page for about 5 or 6 seconds to reach a hidden menu headed 'SW Ver .....' then press 'Next'. Then you'll see your device's PCB P/N listed at the top of next page headed 'Version Information ....'. This is an example below only, yours might differ slightly depending on board version but should include 01652:
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The possible PCB P/Ns for SG/MY 37xx series should be found in its firmware. When examining the fw as an RGN file in hex reader you are looking to find the string 31 00 30 00 35 00 2D 00 30 00 31 00 36 00 35 00 32 (e.g. search for 1.0.5.-.0.1.6.5.2. in text, where "." is wildcard/joker 2E character), if there's no match the conversion might fail.
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When I can read the list, if my PCB P/N supports the conversion to SG/My, before doing it, I will show the hybrid firmware-software to make sure I have done it right. Converting the nüvi 37xx to 3790 Sg/My could be a solution. I mention it, because converted as a nüvi 34xx, everything works well, except the voice commands and the precision of the GPS, in addition, I love the user interface, it is fast and very intuitive.
It may be only that you lost ASR in 34xx because Voice Command in 34xx uses ASR2 and 37xx uses ASR1 .... so like flashing a new logo after conversion the ASR etc. files need to be changed too. i can't recall because it's so long since i messed with that conversion so do some checking in the relevant threads.
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When I delete nonvol as 34xx, the favorite places are not deleted, it behaves the same as 37xx, anyway, here we have something damaged that does not allow us to delete it correctly.
Yes, hence my concern that the more cross-flashing done the more likely potentially 'poisoned' data could be accessed in rgn41 which will result in a bricking. It's never certain to what degree the device itself can access and use 41 in a case such as yours. It may be that it's completely "locked-out" of 41, in that not only can't it write new data it can't even read existing data there.... but i don't know for sure but i suspect it's the latter.
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In the favorite places the place of Garmin Asia, Garmin UU and Garmin EU is also saved, when I delete them from saved places, I can delete everything, but when I do it from nonvol, everything I delete reappears. I mention this, because Could it be that the favorite places are saved in the same storage as the Garmin places and that is why when you delete the nonvol and restart they appear again?
I don't think that should be unexpected. I suspect those so-called "POIs" for Garmin offices aren't saved like 'favourites' that you create yourself which are retained in the nonvol memory which is normally clearable from a healthy device via Clear User Data or Clear NV.
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Interesting about the voice editor.
Yesterday I converted the nüvi 37xx to 34xx again, I will try the tool to see if it solves the problem of voice incompatibility of voice commands and to see if it works for the 34xx.
RGN Voice Editor is to enable incompatible VPM voice files to be used in devices where they're not originally enabled in firmware. Your problem of Voice Command not working in 34xx is more likely to be due to ASR file differences as i mentioned above.
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One question Neil: If my nüvi had a compatible PCB P/N to transform it into a 3790 SG/My, would it become a 3790 SG/My or a 37xx SG/My?
Only one way to find out really which is to try the conversion, i think it's likely an each-way bet that it'll have full SG/MY functions.
It's a good chance that if there's physical flash damage causing 41 to be acting like it is, and that the damage will spread to other parts of the flash memory so eventually the device will become unusable - just like you see when any flash drive or SSD fails slowly. If the problem is instead because there is so much badly corrupt data in there but the device still can read it then eventually it might randomly access some few bytes that kill it completely. Just be prepared for the possibility that you might be spending all this time recovering it only for it to suddenly die unexpectedly. I hope it doesn't seeing you're so dedicated to getting it running properly again.