Garmin Edge 810 GPS Unit with Heart Rate Monitor and Speed/Cadence Sensor Online
- Connected features: live-tracking, instant upload and ride sharing capabilities, social network sharing, plus weather updates
- Comprehensive performance monitoring: Displays market leading, comprehensive ride data (incl. speed, distance, time, heart rate1, cadence2, elevation, power3, location
- Touchscreen and simple user interface: a 2.6" rugged and customizable color touchscreen. Quickly find and view the most important data
- Garmin Connect: instantly upload ride data via the Garmin Connect Mobile app on your phone
- Improved navigation: Bike friendly routing and optional street or topo maps Also supports Garmin Custom Maps and BirdsEye Satellite Imagery See more product details
Best Review: Garmin Edge 810 GPS Unit with Heart Rate Monitor and Speed/Cadence Sensor - I've been using a Garmin Edge 800 for about 16 months now, so I'm pretty familiar w/ the functions, pros, cons and limitations. I've used the EDGE 810 for about 4 rides now... so far, so goodOverall, for an extra $50, I think this is a worth while upgrade. Although, you'd probably lose another $100 off retail reselling your old EDGE 800. So, if the you can swing the $150, do it. To me, the Best New Features I outlined are well worth the incremental costs... All you have to do is rationalize it by going out to ride some more!!!!Best New Features!!- Wireless course uploads to the device and auto sync from mobile app to GarminConnect are the best new features. The thing I dreaded the most was taking the device off the bike to upload my ride or to download new courses.- Lack of page back/next buttons make screen seem larger. Larger fonts, stats, virtual partner and maps- GarminConnect mobile app allows you to track, share, upload and review your activities and coursesPros:- Wireless course uploads to the device and auto sync from mobile app to GarminConnect are the best new features- Lack of page back/next buttons make screen seem larger. Larger fonts, stats, virtual partner and maps- GarminConnect mobile app allows you to track, share, upload and review your activities and courses- Text and numbers are more up-to-date looking, not the old DOS/Courier font block styles. Something as simple as this makes the device more- Same size as the EDGE 800, so you won't have any surprises there.- Same 3 hard buttons (Power, Lap/Reset, Start/Stop) for an easy transition- New graphics make the 810 look a little more sharp. Nothing wrong with the old 800, but the 810 just has nice appeal and sets it apart from the outgoing device... But an onlooker would have to look close to see the differences. Color options would be nice- Wireless connectivity with the iPhone is a real nice to have. Altho, I do notice substantial battery drain on the iPhone when using the live tracking feature (bluetooth + data + mobile app = huge battery drain)... be sure to carry a spare charger or auxiliary battery for your mobile device if you go for long rides. Or, look at my note below for an alternative.- Gone are the page back/next buttons... so you don't have to tap on the screen for the buttons to show up and scroll thru your training pages/maps. Just scroll like on your smart phone to go page back/next- Weather information?? meh... I can have it or not... I research my route and plan for weather conditions before going on a ride so this is neither a pro nor con... If you are the spur of the moment kind of rider, this might be handyCons:- If you have the City Navigator from your EDGE 800, IT WON'T WORK ON THE EDGE 810. You will need to buy a new SD Card with City Navigator. Once you insert the SD Card into an EDGE device, it pairs it with that SD card and you won't be able to transfer it to another unit. There is no straight forward method, but, if you Google it, you can find ways to circumvent this. No reason to have to buy another map if you already bought one for the EDGE 800.- Somewhat disappointed that the resolution isn't any better than the EDGE 800. But then again, its a small screen and majority of the time, I am on the page w/ my ride stats, so its not critical- No upgrade function to transfer all your previous settings.- Live tracking relies on cell signal to send the data... if you ride up in mountainous terrain or desolate areas, this feature may not be worth much to youNotes:- Garmin site mentions a Virtual Racer, which is similar to the Virtual Partner, but I couldn't find anything in the owners manual about it, nor have I figured out how to launch/set it from the device itself- If you want to transfer your old activities, routes or custom wallpapers, you can just copy/paste while its connected to your computer- Had 1 incident (in 16 months) with the EDGE 800 freezing during an 80-mile mapped route; No incidents after 4 rides with the EDGE 810, but 4 rides is not much to base this reliability assessment on- iPhone has an app called CylceMeter (offers live tracking via googlemaps) and it has incredible customization in terms of notifications, announcements, settings, voices, email notifications, reads facebook messages... All this, and it is surprisingly very battery conservative... I can go riding for about 6 hours w/ music on the entire time and still have 30-40% battery life left.... it has everything but an Android version- Wireless course uploads require you to create the course from the Garmin GarminConnect. I create, edit and share all my courses on RidewithGPS (check the site, add a www and a dot com). Faster and not as clumsy as the Garmin site, gives instant elevation stats, add custom course points (shows up on the EDGE)... lots of customization and flexibility
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