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BUYER'S GUIDE

Get to know the Garmin Edge GPS bike computer range

Which of the wide range of Garmin Edge GPS cycling computers should you buy? Check this in-depth guide

If you’re thinking about buying a GPS bike computer, chances are that at least one Garmin Edge has made it on to your shortlist. How do you choose between them? That’s where we can help.

  • Garmin pioneered the cycling GPS unit back in the mid-2000s with the first Edge 205; that first-mover advantage has kept them at the forefront of the category despite strong competition

  • Like other cycling GPS units, Garmin's fall broadly into two categories: with and without maps. Non-mapping Edge models are good for ride-recording and fitness tracking, mapping units add detailed navigation capabilities

  • Garmin Edge GPS units capable of ANT+ and Bluetooth communication are available with and without sets of sensors; unless you really need a speed and cadence sensor, the premium is usually silly and you're better buying a third-party heart rate sensor

  • Nominally discontinued Garmin Edge devices often persist in the retail channel at discounted prices

The Garmin Edge GPS bike computer range

We’ve reviewed most of the Garmin Edges here on road.cc, so whether you want something simple to show your speed and track your ride, or you want advanced navigation and/or high-tech training features, we can talk you through what’s on offer.

As ever, we've cited the best on-line prices we can find at the time, but they do vary. If you really want to save money you can also consider older Garmin Edge computers. These have been superseded in the range but can still be found second hand.

Read more: The stuff they don't tell you about GPS bike computers

The current Garmin Edge cycling GPS computer range

Edge 1030 Plus — £420.47 | £499.99 (bundle with sensors)

RRP: £599.99 (Performance bundle)
Size: 58mm x 114mm x 19 mm
Display size: 88.9 mm diagonal, 282 x 470 pixels
Weight: 124g

Garmin Edge 1030 Plus

The Edge 1030 Plus is Garmin's flagship on-bike GPS, but it's an incremental improvement over the Edge 1030, below, rather than a great leap forward.

In addition to the Edge 1030's features and 282 x 470 pixel screen, the Edge 1030 Plus gets Garmin's Climb Pro app which gives you a load of data about the climb you're toiling up to a) distract you from the pain and b) help you pace yourself so you don't blow it all on the first steep bit. Climb Pro was first launched on the Edge 530 and has been added via a software update to the Edge 1030.

For off-road riding, the Edge 1030 Plus has the Trailforks app, preloaded with trail details from “more than 80 countries.” Its Forksight mode lets you know about upcoming forks in the trail and shows you where you are in a trail network.

The Edge 1030 Plus also lets you pause turn guidance on a route you're following and pick it up later. That means you can go explore a newly-discovered byway, or divert into a town for cake without the unit trying to recalculate your route or tell you you're off course.

Last but not least, Garmin has beefed up the battery compared to the Edge 1030, and now claims it'll go up to 24 hours even with multiple paired sensors and connected features, including LiveTrack running.

Buy if: You want the latest features, largest screen and longest battery life

Edge 830 — £299.99 (£359.99 with sensor bundle)

RRP: £349.99 - with sensor bundle: £429.99
Size: 49mm x 73mm x 21mm
Display size: 66mm diagonal, 246 x 322 pixels
Weight: 79.1g

Garmin Edge 830

The Edge 830 is the Edge 530's big brother, with a touchscreen and fewer buttons but otherwise almost identical set of features.

The significant differences between the 830 and 530 relate to navigation. The 830 can find and navigate you to a specific address or point of interest, which the 530 can't, and you can use the 830 to create a course linking a series of points, or create a roundtrip course. In combination with popularity routing, which uses Garmin's vast database of rides to point you down the rods other riders use, it should substantially improve navigation compared to previous Edge units.

Edge 530 — £219.00 (£295 with sensor bundle)

RRP: £259.99 - with sensor bundle: £349.99
Size: 50mm x 82mm x 20 mm
Display size: 66mm diagonal, 246 x 322 pixels
Weight: 76g

Garmin Edg 530

The cheaper of the pair of new GPS units that Garmin launched in April 2019 is physically the larger of the two because its case has room for buttons, while the Edge 830 is mostly touch-screen operated.

The Edge 530 is a mapping GPS with a colour screen and a claimed battery run-time of 20 hours. Plus, it can be used with Garmin's Charge power pack which was introduced with the Edge 1030.

In fact, what Garmin has done with the Edge 530 is bring the Edge 1030's feature set to a cheaper unit by trimming the screen size and dropping the touch screen. You therefore get a plethora of training and fitness features such as VO2 max, Recovery Adviser, FTP/Watts/kg tracking, and performance condition/lactate threshold/stress score, among others.

Most importantly, the 530 and 830 boast new processors which substantially improve the speed with which they perform tasks like loading and planning routes.

One major new feature is the ClimbPro app which shows you the remaining ascent and grade when you’re climbing, while following a route or course. The idea is to help you gauge your effort over the remainder of your ride, so burning out on your first climb of the day when there are plenty more to come should become a thing of the past.

Edge 130 Plus — £169.99 | £219.99 with heart rate

RRP: £169.99 - Performance Bundle £219.99
Size: 41mm x 63mm x 16 mm
Display size: 45 mm diagonal, 303 x 230 pixels
Weight: 33g

Edge130Plus_HR_1001.4-2

The latest version of Garmin's smallest GPS unit gets the Climb Pro app from the Edge 830 and 1030 Plus, and mountain bike metrics, that'll tell you jump count, jump distance and hang time after you've been out shredding the gnar. It's very much an incremental change over the Edge 130, below.

Edge Explore — £169.99

Garmin Edge Explore

RRP: £219.99
Size: 105mm x 55mm x 22mm
Display size: 39mm x 65mm, 240 x 400 pixels
Weight: 116g

Not to be confused with the Explore 1000 or Explore 820, the Edge Explore is a mapping GPS unit for riders who don't need all the training and fitness orientated features of the more expensive Edge units, but who do want a decent-sized screen and map, and the ability to connect to heart rate monitors for basic fitness measurement.

You don't get the level of customisation of the 1030, 830 or 530; the unit assumes you have just one bike, for example, and there are just two customisable screens. But you still get features such as LiveTrack and GroupTrack for keeping in touch with home base and other riders, support for Connect IQ apps, incident detection to send an alert if you crash, Bluetooth and ANT+ connectivity for everything but power meters and loads more.

And unlike previous Edge Explore and Touring models, the price is sensible.

Buy if: You want a general cycling and navigation GPS without the power measurement and training bells and whistles of the more expensive Edge units.

Discontinued Garmin Edge cycling GPS computers

Edge 1030 — eBay search

RRP: £549.99 (Performance bundle)
Size: 58mm x 114mm x 19 mm
Display size: 88.9 mm diagonal, 282 x 470 pixels
Weight: 123g

garmin-edge-1030-7.jpg

The Edge 1030 boasts the largest screen of any Garmin cycling GPS, aside from the recently-launched Plus version and Garmin says the touch-screen function works in the wet or with gloves. It also has ambient light sensors to automatically adjust the screen brightness to suit the riding conditions. Battery life has been extended to a claimed 20 hours and there’s a new Garmin Charge battery pack accessory to double the run time to 40 hours for longer rides.

Garmin has beefed up the navigation and course planning features. Trendline utilises the many activities uploaded to Garmin Connect to provide routes using the most popular roads and off-road trails, backed up by preloaded Cycle Maps for turn-by-turn directions on all terrain with alerts for sharp corners and elevation information. You’ll also be able to choose from three round-trip suggestions by choosing a distance and starting direction if you want the Edge 1030 to recommended new routes.

Strava fans will be able to make use of the latest version of Strava Live Segments, while Strava Premium users will get further access to real-time races against personal best times. There’s also a new Segment Explore feature that lets you view popular nearby segments. If you want to use the Edge 1030 for serious training, Garmin has developed the new TrainingPeaks Connect IQ app to let you put your daily workouts on the Edge 1030, and it’ll also guide you through the workout in real-time with intensity targets and intervals.

The new Garmin Edge 1030 will cost £499.95 while a bundle option, which includes a premium heart rate monitor as well as cadence and speed sensors, has a suggested retail price of £549.99. There’s a new flush mount that puts the Edge 1030 in line with the handlebars — not above them — for a sleek appearance.

Buy if: You want a big screen and long battery life, but can live without the extra features of the Edge 1030 Plus

Read our review of the Garmin Edge 1030

Edge 520 Plus — eBay search

RRP: £200 - With sensor bundle £290
Size: 49mm x 73mm x 21mm
Display size: 23 mm diagonal, 200 x 265 pixels
Weight: 60g

garmin_edge_520_plus.jpg

The Edge 520 Plus was launched in 2018. It packs many of the features from the more expensive 820 and 1030 units into a unit that is the same size as the regular Edge 520.

The big new feature is the integration of Garmin Cycle Maps as opposed to the more basic mapping and navigation on the first 520. The turn-by-turn navigation works for on and off-road courses, and also has alerts that notify you of upcoming turns. It comes with the rider-to-rider messaging service first seen on the Edge 1030, although your ride buddies will need a Garmin computer with this feature too in order for it to work.

Other highlights of the Edge 520 Plus include preloaded Strava Live Segments and advanced performance feedback when used with Garmin Connect and accessories such as power meters and/or a heart-rate device.

Read our review of the Garmin Edge 520 Plus

Edge 130 — eBay search

RRP: £169.90 - Heart rate bundle £219.99
Size: 41mm x 63mm x 16 mm
Display size: 45 mm diagonal, 303 x 230 pixels
Weight: 33g

edge_130_main_2.jpg

The Edge 130 offers a lot of performance in a small package, with ANT+ and Bluetooth sensor and smartphone connectivity, decent battery life, an easy-to-use button-controlled layout and, perhaps best of all, an absolutely pin-sharp display. You don't get fully fledged navigation like the pricier Garmin models but the basic setup is usable if that's not your top priority.

Packed inside the small unit are sensors that use GPS, GLONASS and Galileo satellites for positioning, with a barometric altimeter. We found it picks up the satellites very quickly so there's no delay to starting a ride, and it hasn't shown any sign of dropping signal during any rides so far. That's using just the GPS mode, which the Edge 130 is set to by default. It worked fine. For more challenging areas you could try either the GPS + GLONASS or GPS + Galileo but they come with a battery penalty. Unless you're having issues in the stock mode you shouldn't have to worry about changing anything.

The 130 packs a lot more data screens in than Garmin's previous entry-level GPS devices, with up to 8 viewable at once. There's no fancy touchscreen, just simple buttons on the side of the unit, and there's no colour in that screen either, but clarity is excellent in all conditions.

Read our review of the Garmin Edge 130

Edge 520 — eBay search

RRP: From £279.99
Size: 49mm x 73mm x 21mm
Display size: 35mm x 47mm, 200 x 265 pixels
Weight: 60g

Strava Edge 520

The Edge 520 is one impressive piece of kit. It works smoothly with a good interface and clear display, and is bang up to date with all the features (barring full mapping) you could want from a cutting edge performance monitoring tool.

Headlining with the built-in ability to support Strava Live Segments (also available on the 820 and 1000, below), Garmin takes live monitoring of your performance out on the road to new levels here. It's a development that will delight segment hunters out there, and it works very well, although you need to pay for Strava Premium membership to enjoy this feature.

Your Strava starred segments are used to populate the 520's database of live segments, along with a selection of popular segments from your local area. You just ride up to the segment and the device cuts in with warnings of its approach and live comparisons against the KOM, the fastest person you follow, or your own PR.

The Edge 520 has a button interface rather than being touchscreen, and we find that that makes for faster response to commands. Course uploads from Strava and Garmin, and syncing with Garmin Connect, are much quicker than with previous units too.

Garmin Edge 520 GPS Bike Computer

The 520 is packed with features. It includes GPS and GLONASS satellite chips, a barometric altimeter, phone message compatibility, all the usual sensors including left and right pedal power recording from Vector pedals and compatibility with other power meters, Shimano Di2 integration, LiveTrack, Varia bike radar and light compatibility, training zone measuring, Functional Threshold Power monitoring, VO2 recording, and recovery time predictions.

It even boasts a basemap although this can't be used to plot a route home. Still, it gives a general idea of where you are.

With all the features stashed inside, as well as that improved display and smaller, lighter design, you might expect battery life to take a hit. It has, compared with the previous 510, but the 520 still offers up to 15 hours of life – long enough for a full day's ride and then some, even with the backlight working and scrolling through multiple pages.

Garmin offers the 520 as a single unit (£279.99) and as a bundle with a heart rate monitor, cadence sensor and speed sensor (£349.99), all of them communicating via ANT+.

There are still a handful of Edge 520 units in retailers, but unless you can find one at a significant discount, you're better gettking the Edge 520 Plus.

Read our review of the Garmin Edge 520

Buy if: You’re after lots of data in a customisable format and don’t need high-tech navigational features

Edge 20 — eBay search

RRP: £109.99
Size: 40mm x 42mm x 17mm
Display size: 23mm x 23mm, 128 x 160 pixels
Weight: 25g

Garmin Edge 20 GPS Bike Computer.jpg

If you want a simple GPS cycling computer for tracking your speed and distance and sharing rides through popular social training websites like Strava, the Garmin Edge 20 is easy to use, compact and provides a decent battery life.

It's discontinued, but there are still a few around. However, it's now as expensive as the more capable Edge 130, so it's hard to see why you wouldn't buy that instead.

The Edge 20 isn’t Bluetooth or ANT+ compatible so you can't use it with a heart rate or cadence sensor. For some, that might be a deal breaker.

The Edge 20 is tiny, barely any bigger than the mount, and looks great on the stem. Garmin's own quarter-turn mount is a doddle to use and the computer will work with a vast number of aftermarket mounts.

The battery is charged via a special cradle that clips to the back of the computer, and the USB lead also uploads your activities to the web. Battery life is a claimed eight hours and we got pretty close to that in testing.

The display is sharp and shows all the data you really need when you’re riding. You get two different screens and it’s easy to switch between them.

It's very intuitive to use, and after a couple of minutes you have the measure of the device. The buttons are easy to operate when wearing gloves as well.

While there's no extensive navigational capability, you can download a route from Garmin’s Connect website and follow a breadcrumb (non-detailed) trail. It's not as easy as following a map, but does keep you on the right track.

If you're sure you're never going to want to keep an eye on your heart rate the Edge 20 will be just fine, but if you might want to add a heart rate monitor in future the Edge 130 is a better buy.

Check out our review of the Garmin Edge 20

Buy if: You want a simple GPS bike computer without Bluetooth or ANT+ compatibility.

Read our guide to 9 of the best cheap GPS cycling computers here.

Edge 25 — eBay search

RRP: From £139.99
Size: 40mm x 42mm x 17mm
Display size: 23mm x 23mm, 128 x 160 pixels
Weight: 25g

Garmin Edge 25 ANT.jpg

The Edge 25 is very similar to the Edge 20 (above) but with the addition of Bluetooth and ANT+ wireless connectivity. The former allows you to sync the device with a smartphone and Garmin's Connect app so you can easily upload completed rides.

ANT+ allows you to pair heart rate, cadence, speed sensors, although the Edge 25 isn’t compatible with power meters.

While the Edge 25 isn't designed for navigation (the bigger Edges are far better at route mapping), you can download courses from Garmin Connect to the Edge 25 and follow a breadcrumb trail which works reasonably well. It even does turn-by-turn navigation, but there's no base map so you can't make up a route on the fly.

The Edge 25 will also provide Live Tracking so friends and family can go online and see where you are.

You get three screens during a ride, and you can configure two of them to display metrics from a whole range on offer: ride time, distance, current speed, ascent, calories and so on. You can't add any extra screens. If you're a data hungry cyclist that might be an issue.

Still, the Edge 25 is an excellent option if you’re after something small with a good set of features.

Check out our review of the Garmin Edge 25

Buy if: You want a compact GPS computer that’s offers compatibility with a heart rate monitor

Edge 820 — eBay search

RRP: From £299.99
Size: 73mm x 49mm x 21mm
Display size: 35mm x 47mm, 200 x 265 pixels
Weight: 67.7g

garmin edge 820.jpg

The Garmin Edge 820 is a feature-packed, compact and neat computer – an impressive piece of kit.

It’s aimed at the performance cyclist who wants to be able to navigate, so isn't as bulky as the 1000 (below), but packs in more features than the 520 (above). The size of the screen means it's not at the same level as the 1000 in terms of navigation, but it might be enough for your needs.

You get some excellent navigational features such as Round Trip Routing which allows the computer to create a route for you, giving options based on distance, climbing and intensity. Maps have a clear layout making it easy to see exactly where you are going, and turn-by-turn prompts are simple to follow. After adding in a postcode, town or specific site, the 820 will get you to the correct place without fuss.

garmin edge 820 24.jpg

As with other Garmin units, you can customise the data you see on each page and set activity profiles, which means you can have different setups for different uses.

Garmin has also added GroupTrack, which allows you to track up to 50 riders (they must have compatible Garmin computers and follow you on Garmin Connect) within 10 miles of you. If you get dropped or lost, you can easily see where others are.

The unit is operated predominantly through touchscreen, but with two buttons at the bottom and the on/off button on the top left. The touchscreen works okay, but compared with button-controlled computers and the 1000 it seems a little sluggish, sometimes taking a second to react. However, it worked just as well with touchscreen-enabled gloves and was still usable in the wet.

The unit is ANT+ and Bluetooth compatible and is simple to pair with sensors on the bike. It also shows notifications and information from your smartphone.

Garmin is catching up with other bike computers in delivering 'incident detection', which means that a text message and location can be sent to a pre-determined contact number in the event of a crash.

Recording is as good as anything we have seen from other GPS computers. There can be a little loss when riding under cover (trees and tunnels, for instance), and occasionally you can see an erratic twitch in your recorded route when riding between tall buildings.

Uploading from the 820 is done through Bluetooth to your smartphone, which is quick and easy through the Garmin Connect app. From there you can either download the file to your desktop or share it with other sites like Strava.

Battery life is around 15 hours, and there are also battery saver modes that can help to extend this, essentially turning off the display while still recording.

If you want heart rate and speed and cadence sensors as well, it's currently cheaper to buy them separately than to buy a bundle that includes them.

Check out our review of the Garmin Edge 820.

Buy if: You’re a performance-focused rider who wants navigational capability

Edge 1000 — eBay search

RRP: From £499.99
Size: 58mm x 112mm x 20mm
Display size: 39mm x 65mm, 240 x 400 pixels
Weight: 114.5g

Garmin Edge 1000 - map

The Edge 1000 is larger than any of the cheaper models in the range, with a screen that’s bigger and easier to read. It's been superseded by the Edge 1030 and Edge 1030 Plus, and has just about vanished from retailers, but there are plenty around second hand.

Unless you're planning to go somewhere incredibly remote, you'll probably find the OpenStreetMap-based mapping to be complete and accurate. The maps are good enough that you can plot yourself a route around an area you don't know just by using the screen. The maps lose a lot of detail as you zoom out because the screen resolution can't show you all the little roads on a wide view of an area, so a certain amount of zooming in and out is required if you're in unfamiliar territory.

The Edge 1000 is capable of turn-by-turn navigation over a prescribed route, or of routing you to a location (or a series of locations) by itself. There are myriad ways of making a GPX file containing a ride you want to do; Garmin's own Connect portal will do it, as will any number of third-party websites. Once you have your file, you can connect your Garmin to your computer and download it.

Rather than the resistive screen of the 820 (the touchscreen works by sensing the pressure of your finger, not its electric signature), the 1000 uses capacitive technology, like a smartphone (the screen carries a charge and the natural conductive properties of your finger affect the screen's charge when you touch it). We’ve not had any false input from rain and it has worked fine with gloves on.

The Edge 1000 will pair with ANT+ devices including various power meters and Shimano's Di2 widget. Displaying the data is simple enough: within each profile (you can set up as many as you need) you can configure five data screens with up to 10 metrics on each. Essentially, if it can be measured and you have an ANT+ sensor capable of measuring it, it can probably be displayed!

The Edge 1000 also has a low-power Bluetooth 4.0 chipset, predominantly so that it can pair with a smartphone. This makes uploading rides simple via the Garmin Connect app. As soon as you save a ride it's automatically uploaded to Garmin Connect, and because Connect now plays nicely with Strava, from there it's automatically synced to Strava.

The Bluetooth tether to your phone also allows you to use Garmin's Live Tracking to broadcast your position to whoever you choose using the phone's data connection. It relies on a data signal being available, so if you're riding through somewhere with limited coverage, updates will be patchy.

The Edge 1000 is also WiFi enabled. That means you can set it up on your home or work network, and as soon as you get back it can auto-sync your ride data that way instead.

The Edge 1000’s stated run time is up to 15 hours, but we’ve found that in real world conditions it's more like 10-12 hours. The screen backlight has the most obvious effect on battery life; if you have it always on at maximum brightness you'll not get anything like 10 hours out of it.

Garmin Edge 1000 - ride summary

Check out our review of the Garmin Edge 1000.

Buy if: You’re after a dedicated GPS unit with good connectivity to other devices and a large, easy-to-read screen (and you find a great deal on a second-hand unit)

For more info go to www.garmin.com

Explore the complete archive of reviews of cycling GPS units on road.cc

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Mat has been in cycling media since 1996, on titles including BikeRadar, Total Bike, Total Mountain Bike, What Mountain Bike and Mountain Biking UK, and he has been editor of 220 Triathlon and Cycling Plus. Mat has been road.cc technical editor for over a decade, testing bikes, fettling the latest kit, and trying out the most up-to-the-minute clothing. He has won his category in Ironman UK 70.3 and finished on the podium in both marathons he has run. Mat is a Cambridge graduate who did a post-grad in magazine journalism, and he is a winner of the Cycling Media Award for Specialist Online Writer. Now over 50, he's riding road and gravel bikes most days for fun and fitness rather than training for competitions.

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73 comments

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Eton Rifle | 6 years ago
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Just got back from touring in France with an Edge 1000.  I stupidly used the built-in route planning as I couldn't get my route, created in Ride with GPS, to load onto the Edge. 

 

Certainly an interesting experience.  Morlaix was only about 33km from Roscoff via the route I planned on Ride with GPS but Garmin's version was over 40km.  On another day, it simply wouldn't calculate a route, despite it being fairly straightforward.  I was obliged to use Google maps and that was a nightmare, directing me down a bridleway that a slim mountain goat would have struggled to negotiate.

I wasn't that impressed with the battery life either.  I turned off Wi-Fi and had auto-brightness enabled but still couldn't get a full day out of it.  On the plus side, the display was easy to read... 

Avatar
Mungecrundle | 6 years ago
0 likes

Asking for a friend who would like a unit for use on both a bicycle and motorcycle.

Is it possible with these Garmin thingumies to have the mapping and navigation functions but to turn off the speed and location history?

Avatar
Jayz58 | 6 years ago
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I recently bought a Garmin 520 and I'm happy with the basic functions it provides but what I'd really like is car like navigation. A couple of times I've been on a club ride and needed to leave the group early and get home when in an unfamiliar area.

As far as I can tell it's not possible to enter a postcode or street into the 520. Can you recommend the best device that will allow me to navigate to a specified place like a car satnav? I have Garmin speed, cadence and HRM monitors that I'd like to keep if possible.

Thanks

Avatar
kev-s | 6 years ago
1 like

Another Garmin user who would never buy another garmin

 

Had an Garmin 800 for a 3 years and amazingly it was fault free!

Decided to buy a 820 to use on the mtb due to some of the newer features

Was buggy as hell, zoom in and the map detail failed to load etc....

Returned it to my local store the same day and got a refund and went back to my trusty old 800

Couple of months later i accidently dropped my 800 and cracked the screen, no problem i thought, ill return it to Garmin for repair

One week later and £70 repair fee and i had my 800 back, well i thought it was my old garmin but it seems the dont repair your unit they exchange it

Anyway new 800 back on the bike, all fine for 4 months and happy with it

Then it begins to play up, map display just completely loses all detail, press the start button and it powers off!!

Spoke to garmin and they say sorry exchange units only come with 3 months warranty and ill have to pay another £70!!!!!

 

 

 

Avatar
Mb747 | 6 years ago
0 likes

The garmin magnet-less speed/cadence sensors are awesome

My garmin 520 has been fine for 3 years no problems, I use open steet maps but it doesn have turn by turn.

I would buy the 520 plus if it had a battery upgrade over the 520

I cant afford the 1030 price

Avatar
simonwright | 6 years ago
1 like

I've had 3 Garmin devices.

Started with an Edge 200 which was good but upgraded to an Edge 25 so that I could start using a heart monitor.  The battery life on the Edge 25 couldn't cope with all day rides (e.g. 200 km audax rides) so I upgraded in June this year to an Edge 130 as the advertised battery life was 15 hours.  However, the battery life can be significantly less with other sensors attached and when using navigation, surely one of the main reasons for owning a bike GPS.

Also, the software on the Edge 130 is currently very poor.  I have applied 4 firmware upgrades since I bought the Edge 130 and these have fixed some issues and broken others.  Check out the Garmin Edge 130 forum if you want to see a list of the ongoing issues.

I therefore feel that the Edge 130 was released too soon and I've been part of a testing program on behalf of Garmin.  This isn't really acceptible when you are buying a device for £170 or for £200 with the heart rate strap as I did.

Simon.

 

Avatar
Wasupwitdat1 | 6 years ago
0 likes

After only owning 3 GPS bike computers I can say Garmin seems to have nailed it with the Edge Explore. It has the features I like to use except for one, that being the gearing display for electronic shifting, but what's more important is the mapping. I like the touch screen alot better than pressing a button. I can see the color screen just fine even though my eye sight is poor. And best of all is the integration with the Varia radar from Garmin. You really have no idea how nice it is to be warned of traffic coming from behind. I can ride down the middle of my lane in the road comfortably where the surfases are better and not have to keep looking back for cars and if something is coming I have plenty of time to move over to the side of the road. I used the Wahoo Elemnt before buying the Explore and I only got 16 months of use out of it before it started going crazy on me. Warranty was only one year so basically the Elemnt was money wasted. Every feature of the Explore works as stated in the reviews and I like how fast the device pares with my phone. The only thing I don't like about Garmin is they don't sync to the Ride With GPS app and I have to plug into my desktop to download the file but that's not that big a deal because I'm the only one viewing that record but Strava is automatic. I wish I could talk more friends into buyin a GPS that has friends tracking because we do get separated on group rides and with the Explore being so affordable I hope more people choose a device like this one. So far my experience has been one of total satisfaction and I'm still imressed it only costs $250 US. I strongly recommend this device.

Avatar
kentos1978 | 6 years ago
1 like

I also have a bolt, which has been brilliant. The screen failed on it about a month or so ago. Hadn't been dropped or bashed and wasn't cracked. I'd bought it second-hand off a forum and thought I'd be lucky to get off with a hefty repair bill.

How wrong I was - customer support said if I didn't have the receipt they could "only" send me a refurbished one, rather than a brand new replacement. They handled all the shipping costs and within a week I had what looked like a brand new replacement unit.

Absolutely faultless customer service.

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armcomdes | 6 years ago
0 likes

Love my Edge 800. How else can I tell how slow I really am! No problems worth mentioning. Be sure to get a silcone case because you will drop it once or twice. I have a little chipping on the long edges that happened before I got the case.

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bobuffs | 5 years ago
1 like

I would strongly avoid Garmin products, especially if you intend buying OS maps which time expire after 12 months, meaning (as happended to me) if your device becomes corrupt you will not be able to reinstall them as Garmin limit the download time (via Garmin Express) to 12 months, and there is no way (that I know of) of off line storing them in case of disaster.  Cost me circa £250:-(

I offered Garmin a part payment on replacement but they refused saying I would have to pay the full purchase price.

So now I have an unusable (for me) Edge 1000....
 

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Miller | 5 years ago
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Article says for 520 Plus: "road.cc hasn't yet tested this computer despite asking Garmin very nicely for a review unit. Hopefully that changes soon so we can test it for you all"

But there is a review on this site from July?

https://road.cc/content/review/245932-garmin-edge-520-plus 

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bigblue | 5 years ago
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Very, erm, "recycled" article - the Edge 20 and 25 are now discontinued.

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Garhel | 5 years ago
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Not sure if I'm just lucky, but I recently upgraded from a Lezyne GPS computer to a 1030, and it is simply brilliant (plus with my increasingly crappy eyesite, I can actually read it!).  The navigation has been great, it connects with power and HR meters and the touch screen has been good in all sorts of weather, even over Winter with gloves on.  It seems reliable, although I only have about 1000 miles on it.  I use it on a couple of bikes, and it just picks up the two different power meters quickly.  It just seems fuss free.  Based on my experience of this I bought an 820 as a gift for my wife, and this is perfect for what she needs.  She just wants the navigation, and that has so far been flawless - we usually plot routes on the computer and upload them via Garmin Connect, and we've only used the on computer destination search and navigation a couple of times, but it's worked ok both times.  

Just an interesting thing - I've found that if I try and plot the same route on Garmin, Strava and Komoot, I get 3 different routes, sometimes using some interesting off-road sections (thanks Strava!), and over a route of 70 miles or so, there can sometimes be a variance of 6 or 8 miles.  

The Lezyne was pretty good as well, just a bit small and the sat nav was really difficult to follow at times, I can't ever see myself going back to breadcrumb type mapping...

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duwie | 5 years ago
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I have the Garmin 1030 Edge. It's my second one, as the first one got replaced due to a blue haze starting to creep in around the edge of the screen, which it appears is a fault on that computer. Now 6 months on, my replacement one is starting to do the same. Customer care was rubbish, Will I be buying another Garmin in the future, the answer to that is a big 'No'. 

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Xenophon2 | 5 years ago
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Also an Edge 1030 here.  Can't fault the hardware -so far- but it absolutely does not integrate at all with one of their Fenix watches.  I own a 5X plus and if you think that you could use the edge for navigation and speed data but the watch to record heart frequency and that everything would come together seamlessly, you've got something coming.  Use them together and your data goes to crap.  Suddenly you burned double calories, rode at an average speed of 100 kmph for 5 minutes etc.  Very annoying and if there's a way to fix it, I haven't found it yet.  If you own a unit, thank whatever spiritual being tickles your fancy for youtube manuals because the official documentation is a disaster zone.  For the price I expected better.

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Secret_squirrel | 4 years ago
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Does anyone know of a master feature comparision sheet for all the major GPS's?

In the main I love my Lezyne Super GPS which seems to cover every need I have at a great price point, apart from full live mapping, but sometimes with usability niggles like slow or painful syncing.  But I also have a Garmin watch and apart from being stuck on my wrist for HRM functions is a serviceable cycle computer in its own right, so I every so often I find myself contemplating drinking more Garmin KoolAid, but not knowing what I might be missing with a given Edge and that they are usually premium priced I usually just live with the Lezyne niggles.

The other problem I have is that you can always find horror stories about each GPS vendor - niether Garmin or Lezyne being exceptions.

I rather suspect that given this area is so complex there is never going be a GPS unit thats even close to perfect for an individual...

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Secret_squirrel | 2 years ago
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Its worth noting that the older Edge 1030 had Climb Pro added with a firmwear update if the Garmin Forums are to be believed.

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kinderje | 2 years ago
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I have had a Garmin 500 for years and never had a problem with it. Unfortunately, the battery is finally starting to go on it so I am looking at a new unit.

Had a loan of an Edge Explore and really liked the touchscreen but now quite like the idea of Climb Pro. Do I go for an Edge 830 or does the Edge Explore have Climb Pro? I don't have power meter or cadence sensor so is the 830 overkill?

TIA.

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ConcordeCX replied to Mungecrundle | 6 years ago
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Mungecrundle wrote:

Asking for a friend who would like a unit for use on both a bicycle and motorcycle. Is it possible with these Garmin thingumies to have the mapping and navigation functions but to turn off the speed and location history?

delete the tracks when you’ve finished.

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ConcordeCX replied to Eton Rifle | 6 years ago
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Eton Rifle wrote:

Just got back from touring in France with an Edge 1000.  I stupidly used the built-in route planning as I couldn't get my route, created in Ride with GPS, to load onto the Edge. 

...

the route that the device follows is a function of the route you plotted, and the map in the device. It uses its map to find a way between each of the way/routepoints you entered. If you entered them with a different map or a different routing algorithm / constraints then it will do things differently on the ground.

If you tour a lot it is worthwhile learning to use Basecamp because you can plot a route using the map that is on your device, using your own profile, and preview what it is going to do when you are actually riding.

if the preview doesn’t go where you want then you can move waypoints around or add new ones.

one little trick is to put waypoints in the middle of road segments that you want to go through, rather than at junctions.

Note, i’ve always used eTrex devices rather than bike-specific ones as I came to GPSes via hiking rather than biking.

lastly, always take paper maps as back-up. In France the IGN Top100 series is best for cycling. You would have found Roscoff-Morlaix very easy to navigate...!

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kevvjj replied to bobuffs | 5 years ago
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bobuffs wrote:

I would strongly avoid Garmin products, especially if you intend buying OS maps which time expire after 12 months, meaning (as happended to me) if your device becomes corrupt you will not be able to reinstall them as Garmin limit the download time (via Garmin Express) to 12 months, and there is no way (that I know of) of off line storing them in case of disaster.  Cost me circa £250:-(

I offered Garmin a part payment on replacement but they refused saying I would have to pay the full purchase price.

So now I have an unusable (for me) Edge 1000....

Ditch the maps and head on over to Talky Toaster or openstreetmaps - your unit will work just fine with those maps and some are free!

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Jetmans Dad replied to Miller | 5 years ago
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Miller wrote:

Article says for 520 Plus: "road.cc hasn't yet tested this computer despite asking Garmin very nicely for a review unit. Hopefully that changes soon so we can test it for you all"

But there is a review on this site from July?

https://road.cc/content/review/245932-garmin-edge-520-plus 

 

Looking at the dates on the comments, I'm guessing recycled article with no updates or acknowledgement of the original publication date ... as usual. 

I don't mind them recycling stuff to keep things moving and have seen some interesting articles from a year or two back that I wouldn't otherwise have seen, but the site does need to do better at pointing out when an article was written and at least acknowledging stuff like this. 

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gonedownhill replied to Secret_squirrel | 2 years ago
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Yep, ClimbPro is on the regular 1030 and has been for the 14 months I've owned one. Think most of the features are the same across the two, DCRainmaker certainly recommends getting the regular if you can pick it up cheap.

I got one for £290 last Autumn. Was a bit reluctant to spend that much given the amount of bad feedback for Garmin products on pages such as this but mine has been faultless so far.

 

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JimboBaggins | 6 years ago
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For what it's worth, I had some really bad experiences with my Edge 810 - random crashing mid-ride, mid-route, etc.  Worst was losing the entire Fred Whitton ride I did...  I caved in and bought the 520, which has worked flawlessly.  (Mapping also works just fine if you only want to follow a route with a proper map - DC Rainmaker's post explains how to do that.  Many articles / reviews imply that it doesn't do mapping, but it's just turn-by-turn it doesn't do.)

I just bought the Edge 1030 to get long battery life for a week on the Cent Cols Challenge this summer (the 520 battery was fading a bit), and was very nervous that it would revert to the buggy 810 experience - some forum posts had suggested this.  But I upgraded firmware straighaway and have kept it up to date, and it's been fine so far.  It's noticeably quicker to do everything than the 520.  (However, I've probably jinxed it and it will start crashing....)

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FerrisBFW | 6 years ago
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820 hunk of junk. Worst Garmin I have owned.. 305 and 705 were ace straight out of the box, 810 was bad but this 820 takes the top prize for the most time consuming useless item of tech I have owned.

I was bought a 820 as a surprise to replace my 810 as it was getting on. It seemed okay out of the box (i didn't try a route initially), so I sold the 810. How dumb am I!

List of issues I can remember:

- erratic speed recording and displayed
- re-calculating routes even though I have set 'do not recalc'
- useless touch screen - fingers dont work 75% of the time, but my sweat changes pages no problem
- rubbish battery life - I think this is now fixed
- automatic uploads to the app dont work - I have tried all the normal remove, rename but still its dead
- accident reporting for no apparent reason, and I cant cancel it sending when it gives you the option
- tiny screen, oh why didnt I check the screen size  2 I am thinking of going to the 1030 but I am scared/scarred. I am starting Audax's so the bigger screen would really help. 810 was bad enough, 820 is tiny

sick and tired of it. To be honest I have given up fiddling with it...

wish I could have my 810 back  2

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paulrattew replied to FerrisBFW | 6 years ago
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FerrisBFW wrote:

820 hunk of junk. Worst Garmin I have owned.. 305 and 705 were ace straight out of the box, 810 was bad but this 820 takes the top prize for the most time consuming useless item of tech I have owned. I was bought a 820 as a surprise to replace my 810 as it was getting on. It seemed okay out of the box (i didn't try a route initially), so I sold the 810. How dumb am I! List of issues I can remember: - erratic speed recording and displayed - re-calculating routes even though I have set 'do not recalc' - useless touch screen - fingers dont work 75% of the time, but my sweat changes pages no problem - rubbish battery life - I think this is now fixed - automatic uploads to the app dont work - I have tried all the normal remove, rename but still its dead - accident reporting for no apparent reason, and I cant cancel it sending when it gives you the option - tiny screen, oh why didnt I check the screen size  2 I am thinking of going to the 1030 but I am scared/scarred. I am starting Audax's so the bigger screen would really help. 810 was bad enough, 820 is tiny sick and tired of it. To be honest I have given up fiddling with it... wish I could have my 810 back  2

 

There seem to have been some serioud quality control issues with the 820 production. My 820 is brilliant. I've not had any of the issues you mention - it just works and works really well. I think that for those who have got a unit that works properly, like me, it's an absolutely spectacular model, but for those who have a less than perfect unit it is worse than strapping a rotten fish to your bars

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watlina | 6 years ago
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Just to give the view of a happy Garmin user. I had an 800 then went to the 1000 when it came out. I've also got a Vivosport as a fitness tracker so all the data comes together via Garmin Connect and Strava.

I import/create  all my routes via RidewithGPS. I've never had any problems with turn-by-turn directions on routes via RidewithGPS. I do use the Discoverer OS maps on the Micro-SD which originally came with my 800 in the Trail bundle.  I'll admit I never use the built in route creator which is where a lot of people seem to have problems.

I don't even plug it in the PC anymore as I use the IQ app routeCourse to pull in my RidewithGPS routes wirelessly. Several of the people I ride with also have the 1000 so we find it easy to wirelessly share a route via the sharing function when we meet up.

It gets used across several bikes some with the old GSC-10 sensor and some with the newer wireless sensors. I also move my Vector 3 pedals from bike to bike with no problem. 

It's used every weekday on the commute and then weekend riding so the Edge 1000 has probably recorded about 1000 rides over 12,000+ miles with no real problems. I use the Garmin silicone case and a glass screen protector which has kept it good condition

I won't bother with a 1030 as the 1000 has been fine but will likely get what ever comes next. 

 

 

 

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kil0ran | 6 years ago
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Long term Wahoo fan but they've always been a bit flaky/quirky. Support is good though - currently chatting to them about an issue with ride truncation on my OnePlus 6, even though the RFLKT+ is long out of support.

Most of the issues I've had with them is slow pairing with sensors and the RFLKT, this is the first time I've had ride truncation. Definitely a OnePlus 6 issue (rides consistently truncate between 35 & 40 mins) because I've dusted off my old Pixel this morning and had no issues whatsoever.

I've bought an Edge 25 s/h for my son for Father's Day so I'll see how that goes. Having done a couple of test rides I've been impressed so far, and Garmin Connect seems to be working fine too. 

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Alanmbard | 6 years ago
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I bought a Garmin Edge 820 bundle for £340 this year and have had nothing but trouble. The unit keeps locking up when I start out on a ride and I need to perform a reset most times I go out. The routes and segments I set up on garmin connect don't download properly, if I edit and download again the edge shows the old route, meaning I end up cycling the wrong route. I think it is all down to software bugs, software not being fully tested before release, not surprising since they have so many models. Have had dozens of email exchanges with support, some of the responses are really poor. Now they have offered to replace the unit. So on top of the £339 I paid they now want me to pay for return postage and insurance so they can send me a second hand unit that has been back for repair and supposedly tested by them. I have zero confidence that the replacement will be as good as the original never mind better. 

The experience isn't helped by them sending random software releases without release notes identifying any bugs they might have fixed.

Their staff need to get on their bikes and use their poor products.

i would advise avoiding any garmin products. I think their software dev, test and release processes are really amateurish.

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spacedyemeerkat | 7 years ago
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To provide yet more balance: my 1000 has been a piece of sh*t since purchase on its release a couple of years ago. Many issues characterised by these headings: navigation, segments, connectivity and barometric sensor. 

I genuinely don't think I've ever experienced such appalling quality control (mainly, but not totally,  relating to firmware updates) with anything I've ever owned as my Garmin 1000.

Like a previous poster, I spent some time researching the Elemnt this evening after reading previous comments. Sounds like a great piece of kit and is seriously tempting. If only it had Varia Radar integration (another Garmin product with issues).

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