It’s time for a new GPS receiver / bike computer
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- This topic has 6 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 4 years, 8 months ago by
kwarkentien.
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August 2, 2020 at 9:23 pm #1106255
bentbike33
ParticipantWahoo ELEMNT Bolt meets most of your conditions (depending on the final negotiated price of your fixie). I think I get about 8 hours of battery life. It does not need external sensors, but I think it is more accurate with the speed sensor. It’s pretty small. It does all the GPS mappy stuff, but not in color. I called tech support for it once because I wanted to do a factory reset, but how to do so was not described anywhere obvious in the operating instructions. I can’t recall how to do the factory reset however, because I only ever did it once, so reliability is good.
August 3, 2020 at 1:30 am #1106256bikesnick
Participant@Steve O 201961 wrote:
So I need a replacement. I’ve heard people proclaim allegiance to Wahoo, and others tout their various Garmins. …
Thanks for your ideas and suggestions.The DC Rainmaker website does a fantastic job of reviewing all things bicycle tech. See this link for the most recent Sports Technology Buyers Guide. There are more recent reviews of technology in the Product Reviews link.
August 3, 2020 at 1:43 pm #1106259LhasaCM
ParticipantAlso worth considering from a price standpoint are the Lezyne GPS units. Not quite as user-friendly as the Wahoo experience from my recollection, but slightly friendlier to the pocketbook.
August 3, 2020 at 7:02 pm #1106265ImaCynic
ParticipantBoth Sarah and I have Lezyne GPS units. (Mega XL specifically). This biggest differences between Lezyne and others is that it works in conjunction with its smartphone app to provide navigation capabilities. By not having to put the brain into the unit, it accomplishes two things: Much lower cost and much longer battery life. Think of it as a hybrid between old school bike computers and ones that can host a Zoom meeting.
Lezyne does not require any additional external sensors to record a ride, although plenty of options are available. On its own, it provides GPS track/breadcrumbs, or one can download a local map to provide mapping info (but not navigation), but often times being able to see where a street goes to is all I wanted to know. When used in conjunction with the app/phone, it provides the route overlay in the map and turn-by-turn instructions, it can also do other things such display incoming calls, email, and/or text messages. The app also provides the sync to other apps such as Strava.
My unit is rated for 48hr runtime, so I can do almost a week worth of riding on a single charge. Lastly, Lezyne units are roughly half the cost of comparable Garmin or Wahoo units, often discounts can make it even less.
August 4, 2020 at 3:44 am #1106269TwoWheelsDC
ParticipantIf you want a free one I have a 510 that I found like a year or two ago and was never claimed (I tried finding the owner on Twitter to no avail). Not sure how well the battery has held up after sitting in a box all that time, but you’re free to see if it works.
August 9, 2020 at 4:19 pm #1106299kwarkentien
ParticipantI’m an obsessive techie and currently have an Edge 1030 that I absolutely love. Best Garmin I’ve ever had (started with an Edge 705 10 or so years ago). Battery life is incredible plus it has an optional additional external battery (I don’t have this) that mounts below it to give you some ridiculous amount of battery life (24-48 hours or so, I think). But now there is a *new* Edge 1030 Plus that of course I have to *consider* (assuming I’m ever allowed to ride again after my recent DVT/hypertension/$#!+$#0w experience). So I might have a 1030 available for some poor schmo at a reasonable ($0) price should you not procure other devices. Contact me off list.
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