Which GPS?
Moderators: Bearbonesnorm, Taylor, Chew
Which GPS?
I've been looking at buying a Garmin Edge Touring. Has anyone got any experience of using this for navigation or is there a better option out there around the similar price?
- Bearbonesnorm
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Re: Which GPS?
Usual answer .... Dakota 20 / eTrex 20 or 30 / Oregon
All use AA batteries so are well suited to multi-day trips. All pretty rugged and robust.
All use AA batteries so are well suited to multi-day trips. All pretty rugged and robust.
May the bridges you burn light your way
- johnnystorm
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Re: Which GPS?
I borrowed a Touring from a friend to try the "route generator" feature. I had a Dakota 200 at the time and have since bought an 810.
I met up with Chicken Legs to do Dave Barter's Norfolk Ride. Using the Garmin to get to the start point took me on a route of over 50 miles. Taking the "cycle friendly" route I knew covered under 35 miles. Obviously it depends if you want it to take you on a ride for the sake of it, or as the "quickest" way to get somewhere. It was about a year old when I borrowed it and the battery was flat after about 9hrs riding/navigating/following a GPX.
In summary, the Dakota is better for long rides as Lithium AAs have double the life and are of course easily replaced mid ride, I'm finding my 810 lasts longer than the Touring did and can also connect hrm, cadence, etc and the touring's maps are essentially "free" OSM maps so I can add them to the 810 for nothing anyway. All I can think of in the touring's favour is that it's ready to use out of the box and can randomly generate rides of a certain distance. I don't find that worth the premium over a Dakota and the 810 isn't too much more and does loads more (uploading rides through my phone as soon as I finish is great!)
I met up with Chicken Legs to do Dave Barter's Norfolk Ride. Using the Garmin to get to the start point took me on a route of over 50 miles. Taking the "cycle friendly" route I knew covered under 35 miles. Obviously it depends if you want it to take you on a ride for the sake of it, or as the "quickest" way to get somewhere. It was about a year old when I borrowed it and the battery was flat after about 9hrs riding/navigating/following a GPX.
In summary, the Dakota is better for long rides as Lithium AAs have double the life and are of course easily replaced mid ride, I'm finding my 810 lasts longer than the Touring did and can also connect hrm, cadence, etc and the touring's maps are essentially "free" OSM maps so I can add them to the 810 for nothing anyway. All I can think of in the touring's favour is that it's ready to use out of the box and can randomly generate rides of a certain distance. I don't find that worth the premium over a Dakota and the 810 isn't too much more and does loads more (uploading rides through my phone as soon as I finish is great!)
Re: Which GPS?
With the 810 can you not create a route home via a garmin app and upload it? I was under the impression you could.johnnystorm wrote:I borrowed a Touring from a friend to try the "route generator" feature. I had a Dakota 200 at the time and have since bought an 810.
I met up with Chicken Legs to do Dave Barter's Norfolk Ride. Using the Garmin to get to the start point took me on a route of over 50 miles. Taking the "cycle friendly" route I knew covered under 35 miles. Obviously it depends if you want it to take you on a ride for the sake of it, or as the "quickest" way to get somewhere. It was about a year old when I borrowed it and the battery was flat after about 9hrs riding/navigating/following a GPX.
In summary, the Dakota is better for long rides as Lithium AAs have double the life and are of course easily replaced mid ride, I'm finding my 810 lasts longer than the Touring did and can also connect hrm, cadence, etc and the touring's maps are essentially "free" OSM maps so I can add them to the 810 for nothing anyway. All I can think of in the touring's favour is that it's ready to use out of the box and can randomly generate rides of a certain distance. I don't find that worth the premium over a Dakota and the 810 isn't too much more and does loads more (uploading rides through my phone as soon as I finish is great!)
Re: Which GPS?
I have a Garmin 605, which is a similar creature to the Tourer. To be fair all the GPS units are pretty good nowadays, all depends on what feature you are prioritising.
My 605 also has the route generator, which can be useful, but never is the quickest way to get from A to B. Benefits are the charge comes from a USB so I can connect is to a dyno hub. However, the charge only lasts around 8 to 10 hours so it needs to be connected to something!!
etrex battery lasts longer (up to 20 hours I believe) and runs on replaceable batteries, so you can carry them with you. The screen is also bigger.
Both are pretty water resistant.
If you have an 810 etc then you can put on a cadence meter, if you are into counting how fast you can pedal.
My 605 also has the route generator, which can be useful, but never is the quickest way to get from A to B. Benefits are the charge comes from a USB so I can connect is to a dyno hub. However, the charge only lasts around 8 to 10 hours so it needs to be connected to something!!
etrex battery lasts longer (up to 20 hours I believe) and runs on replaceable batteries, so you can carry them with you. The screen is also bigger.
Both are pretty water resistant.
If you have an 810 etc then you can put on a cadence meter, if you are into counting how fast you can pedal.
- johnnystorm
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Re: Which GPS?
Yes you can. The feature I badly referred to was the Touring's ability to take you to a place using it's maps just like a normal car sat-nav, i.e. just put in a place name or a postcode. I expect the 810 would do this as well if routable maps were installed (OSM freebies are available as well as garmin city explorer's etc). The touring also has a random ride generator, i.e. you can ask it to create you a ride of 30 miles and it'll generate 3 options for you to pick from and take you out on a 30 mile loop back to where you started.Justchris wrote:With the 810 can you not create a route home via a garmin app and upload it? I was under the impression you could.
Back to the 50 mile meander it took me on, it was a nice quiet route and took me on roads I'd not used before but it certainly wasn't direct. Of course, that only matters if you have to be somewhere on time....like meeting Andy at the start of a 130k ride.
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Re: Which GPS?
Dakotas and Oregons support cadence and/or HRM too.StuartG wrote:
If you have an 810 etc then you can put on a cadence meter, if you are into counting how fast you can pedal.
Re: Which GPS?
Can a Dakota oregon or etrex 30 show a track to follow on a map and show your heart rate at the same time?ScotRoutes wrote:Dakotas and Oregons support cadence and/or HRM too.StuartG wrote:
If you have an 810 etc then you can put on a cadence meter, if you are into counting how fast you can pedal.
Re: Which GPS?
Oregon definitely can. You can select 2 or 4 fields to show on the map screen.Justchris wrote:Can a Dakota oregon or etrex 30 show a track to follow on a map and show your heart rate at the same time?ScotRoutes wrote:Dakotas and Oregons support cadence and/or HRM too.StuartG wrote:
If you have an 810 etc then you can put on a cadence meter, if you are into counting how fast you can pedal.
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Re: Which GPS?
ctznsmith wrote:Oregon definitely can. You can select 2 or 4 fields to show on the map screen.Justchris wrote:Can a Dakota oregon or etrex 30 show a track to follow on a map and show your heart rate at the same time?ScotRoutes wrote:Dakotas and Oregons support cadence and/or HRM too.StuartG wrote:
If you have an 810 etc then you can put on a cadence meter, if you are into counting how fast you can pedal.
And you'd likely want a screen the size of an Oregon if you want to have multiple data fields on view along with your map.
Re: Which GPS?
I used to use a cadence sensor when I was doing road TT, it was a good training aid.
Is there any benefit for off-road? Having just come back off the trails tonight, there is no way a Garmin sensor would have survived.
Is there any benefit for off-road? Having just come back off the trails tonight, there is no way a Garmin sensor would have survived.
Re: Which GPS?
Are you sure about the Oregon supporting the HRM facility.
I read somewhere recently that it wouldn't.
I read somewhere recently that it wouldn't.
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Re: Which GPS?
Positive.
I've just done it again to make sure
I've just done it again to make sure
Re: Which GPS?
Thanks scot routes. Now does anyone know if you can do exactly the same with an etrex.
Cheers
Chris
Cheers
Chris
- johnnystorm
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Re: Which GPS?
Heart rate on show in a screenshot on this page:
http://www.takeadventure.com/index.php% ... temid%3D45
http://www.takeadventure.com/index.php% ... temid%3D45
Re: Which GPS?
Justchris wrote:Thanks scot routes. Now does anyone know if you can do exactly the same with an etrex.
Cheers
Chris
I've recently started using an etrex 30x. picks up ant+ HR strap easily. displays 2 or 4 data fields on the map page (or 0) I have HR and either trip distance or distance to go. theres a page you can arrange with any number of data fields thats easy to scroll between
Re: Which GPS?
Thanks for all the advice guys, I think I might go with a Dakota. I'm not fussed for HR or cadence etc. Just want something I can plumb a gpx into and get away out. The replaceable batteries are also a bonus, I thought about getting a dynamo hub to run the touring but that's an expense I could do without right now!
Re: Which GPS?
Sorry hijacked your thread a bit Blair. But thanks everyone.Blair512 wrote:Thanks for all the advice guys, I think I might go with a Dakota. I'm not fussed for HR or cadence etc. Just want something I can plumb a gpx into and get away out. The replaceable batteries are also a bonus, I thought about getting a dynamo hub to run the touring but that's an expense I could do without right now!
Chris
- johnnystorm
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Re: Which GPS?
I have connected an HRM to my Dakota , pretty sure cadence is possible as well if the mood takes you!Blair512 wrote:Thanks for all the advice guys, I think I might go with a Dakota. I'm not fussed for HR or cadence etc. Just want something I can plumb a gpx into and get away out. The replaceable batteries are also a bonus, I thought about getting a dynamo hub to run the touring but that's an expense I could do without right now!
Re: Which GPS?
Re HRM on etrex 30.
I specifically got a separate HRM as my etrex runs in battery saving mode ie off unless arriving at WP but I do need to see my HR fairly continuously.
Polar monitors are so cheap now that the whole thing costs less than a Garmin HRM band and I can use it in the gym.
I suppose someone is going to tell me the etrex will run only displaying HR and switch off nav thereby saving battery.
I specifically got a separate HRM as my etrex runs in battery saving mode ie off unless arriving at WP but I do need to see my HR fairly continuously.
Polar monitors are so cheap now that the whole thing costs less than a Garmin HRM band and I can use it in the gym.
I suppose someone is going to tell me the etrex will run only displaying HR and switch off nav thereby saving battery.
Zazen - nothing happens next this is it.
Re: Which GPS?
Don't worry about it Chris, everydays a school day! I never knew they supported all those things, useful info for the futureJustchris wrote: Sorry hijacked your thread a bit Blair. But thanks everyone.
Chris
Blair
- johnnystorm
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Re: Which GPS?
I used my Dakota just as a trip computer at the Bonty 24hr race so I could see the HRM reading.....Mariner wrote:Re HRM on etrex 30.
I specifically got a separate HRM as my etrex runs in battery saving mode ie off unless arriving at WP but I do need to see my HR fairly continuously.
Polar monitors are so cheap now that the whole thing costs less than a Garmin HRM band and I can use it in the gym.
I suppose someone is going to tell me the etrex will run only displaying HR and switch off nav thereby saving battery.
If the polar monitor is ANT+ compaticle then it should talk to a garmin anyway, doesn't need to be garmin branded. Having said that the £18 Garmin ANT ipad adaptor won't speak to trainerroad but the £50 Wahoo one does....handy that.
- MidgeMagnet
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Re: Which GPS?
Another hijack, but also been looking out for one recently.
The new etrex touch 25 and 35 look decent, sort of a mix of the oregon, dakota and etrex. They are fairly new so I'm kinda looking around for reviews. One thing I am concerned about is that the touch screen and use with gloves. Anyone had any experience of it?
The new etrex touch 25 and 35 look decent, sort of a mix of the oregon, dakota and etrex. They are fairly new so I'm kinda looking around for reviews. One thing I am concerned about is that the touch screen and use with gloves. Anyone had any experience of it?
Re: Which GPS?
I've got an 810. With gloves I can swipe between the different screens but take them off if I need to do anything else with it, zooming in and out on the map for example.
- johnnystorm
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Re: Which GPS?
Garmin's are old tech resistive screens so are fine with gloves. Just make sure you fit screen protectors as muddy finger tips wreak havoc!MidgeMagnet wrote:Another hijack, but also been looking out for one recently.
The new etrex touch 25 and 35 look decent, sort of a mix of the oregon, dakota and etrex. They are fairly new so I'm kinda looking around for reviews. One thing I am concerned about is that the touch screen and use with gloves. Anyone had any experience of it?