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I use a very old Oregon, several years old.
No software faults, works every time all the time. Had it for about 6 years, then I got a refurbished one for zero when I sent them mine with a scratched screen and some drop off on the speed it processed.
Then sadly I broke it by falling off.
Bought a new one from EBay. Some random shop still had one in stock. Seems some of the older stuff just works better.
I have an Edge 800 (probably about 7 years old) and it's been out in all weathers, and plenty of rain when I lived in Manchester and used it daily. Still works perfectly 😀
On my 3rd 800:
1st one died in the rain on 2011 Dragon Ride - got warranty replacement
2nd one corroded so much in the USB port that no connection possible - got £76 refurbed replacement
3rd one mostly works but touch screen doesn't work top right half so not sure how long it'll last now. This one has lasted the longest.
I like decent mapping which only Garmin seem to do though the Hammerhead looks good.
I've only ever had one garmin which is the 820 I bought recently. I was expecting to be gaping in awe at my move to a brand new piece of tech that would revolutionise my riding. Imagine my disappointment when realised it's an utter shower of shit. I'm honestly gobsmacked that a company that surely should have totally monopolised the market have executed the whole thing so incredibly badly.
The software is pathetic and I'm sick of the relentless updates and I've given up trying to fix any glitches as there's so many of them. It unilaterally decides to change important settings for no apparent reason and prompted by nobody and unless I've studied a route pretty carefully in advance I'd never put my total faith in it to get me anywhere.
Utter crap and I'll never buy garmin again.
I've had various Garmins for the last 12 years. All worked great and actually all still work fine now. The others don't get much use any more, but my 500 gets used for every ride I go on.
Garmin used to be great with replacements or repairs. Maybe things have changed.
I had a 705 for 6 years, now had a 1000 for 3 years, ne'er a hint of trouble with either, what are you lot doing?!
My 510 was a struggle initially with dodgy firmware that kept trashing rides in various situations. I'm on 4.40 now and even though there are a couple of newer versions I'm reluctant to update it as it just works for me.
Except for bluetooth, which is just utter crap. Never pairs with a phone. Doesn't matter what phone. Android phones, Windows even. 9 times out of 10 fails to pair and have to reboot the Garmin each time to stand a chance of it pairing.
Also, Garmin Express is banned from my computers. It forces firmware updates on you and I was having issues with my tablet not going to sleep properly and draining the battery, and Windows sleep study pointed at Garmin Express. So said goodbye to that.
mintimperial - Member
From here, hidden in the Guarantees for Faulty Goods section. We are still crushed by the oppressive jackboot of the EU, so you still enjoy that right, for now.
UK trumps EU warranty anyway and goes to 6 years. Though it's a lot more difficult after the initial 6 months. Then becomes down to you to prove the fault was there from the start.
I bought a 520 a couple of weeks ago, looked great and worked really well with my iPhone but distance and elevation were off compared to previous results from me and mates and the big problem for me was the maps. I'd spend ages plotting one, move it across only to find it cut three miles of it out?!? I only found when out on the bike too which was problematic. It didn't do anything more than my phone really so I took it back.
What are Polar ones like?
I fancied an edge 820 but guess the maps would do the same and the touch screen is meant to be temperamental, plus don't want to spend £300.
I'm considering a Bolt.
njee20 - MemberI had a 705 for 6 years, now had a 1000 for 3 years, ne'er a hint of trouble with either, what are you lot doing?!
Based on the responses in this thread, it's probably more a case of 'what are you doing to make the work faultlessly for so long?'...
😆
I forgot in my mini-rant above to mention that when I first got my Garmin, it read out on distance by exactly 10% when compared to my mate's Garmin. Because we weren't sure which one was reading incorrectly, I used mine on the drive home & it was 10% out on the odometer.
Fixed with a firmware update eventually...
My 510 has a great in built feature.. it over exaggerates elevation by 10-25% and makes me look like a riding god
Mine really over exaggerates the "Calories burned" so i eat too much cake....
Edge 200: Brilliant little thing. Bought 5 years ago, still going, somewhere. On the back of tht I decided I'd upgrade to a 500...
Edge 500: Quite good. Had the (programmed in?) bug when using it to navigate.
"off course!"
"course found!"
"off course!"
"course found!"
/breadcrumb screen goes blank for a bit
"off course!"
"course found!"
Died just out of warranty, but Garmin sent a refurb unit as a replacement for free which is still going (with that same course bug). On the back of that warranty support I decided to upgrade to a 810...
Edge 810: OK. Seems very clever, but has crashed twice while on long rides (I guess on short rides there just isn't as much time to go wrong!). Both times turning it off and on again got it going but wiped the ride data, which then had to be manually dug out while plugged into a pc.
Most unintuitive menu layouts ever.
Leave it to plot a route itself and you are guaranteed a magical mystery tour of all the back alleys, dried out river beds and fenced off footpaths in the local vicinity. That's probably classed as a feature.
The more you spend the worse it gets...
There's speculation about a 1000 replacement as it's a bit old now....
Replaced a Garmin Edge 1000 after 5 months with a Lezyne Enhanced Super GPS. Navigation on the Garmin was utterly garbage except it kept you fitter as navigation would break down after about 20 miles so you drive around finding your way which gives you longer rides - don't know if this is a feature....
The Lezyne is about a third of the price but three times better. Haven't failed me yet after 4 months. Turn by turn navigation uses arrows and street names. It works surprisingly well even though there are no maps.
The best feature: grap your phone, enter the Lezyne app, point to a destination, choose the route you prefer and hit go. The map (google based) is sent to the Lezyne via bluetooth and off you go. Dead simple and it works every time. Battery life is fantastic, needs a charge every 2-3 weeks, the Garmin was at least once a week. It syncs with Strava if that's your thing.
I would say that the Garmin was ok with performance data and it has good menus. I also liked the screen, the fonts and the layout. But with crappy and slow hardware I'm amazed they can sell them for the price of a mid-range smartphone that is much more advanced. Even more amazed that the world leader and innovator in car navigation can't put a decent map on their bike gps products and guide you back to your route.
Turn by turn navigation uses arrows and street names. It works surprisingly well even though there are no maps.
does this work well off road?