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View Full Version : I got a Garmin!



MCAP
01-19-2011, 12:47 PM
I bought a Garmin Forerunner 305 with the bike speed/cadence sensor kit. It just came via UPS and I'm just so excited that I had to share!

JennK13
01-19-2011, 12:52 PM
I bought a Garmin Forerunner 305 with the bike speed/cadence sensor kit. It just came via UPS and I'm just so excited that I had to share!

Yay! Post how you like It and how easy it was to figure out. I ordered DH one for his birthday and we're waiting for it to arrive!

MCAP
01-19-2011, 12:58 PM
We're starting the Carmichael series tonight at the indoor trainer sessions so I'll be using the heart rate monitor part of it to set my zones. Hopefully it's easy to figure out! I'll report back.

It's charging now. I probably won't get much more work done today. I'll be too busy reading the manual :)

XMcShiftersonX
01-19-2011, 01:05 PM
So cool! My husband and I treated ourselves to Garmin Edge 800's for xmas. I don't know too much about all the different models, my husband did the research for these ones and it seems to have everything we wanted on it. I love it so far though! It's so much fun to do the training thing, where you set the pace you want to keep and can watch your little bike try to keep up with the computer bike. My husband bought the detailed map program, and we'll probably get one for me as well. He also got the cadence sensor, and I'll probably pick up one as well! I got the heart monitor, which was really fun to watch my heart rate get into the 190's while I was sprinting, and then to see how long it took to go to baseline after I stopped working out! It's also really cool to go on the garmin website and have your rides show up in graph form. Enjoy!

Mr. Bloom
01-19-2011, 02:54 PM
Welcome to the (addicted) club!

zoom-zoom
01-19-2011, 03:48 PM
I bought a Garmin Forerunner 305 with the bike speed/cadence sensor kit. It just came via UPS and I'm just so excited that I had to share!

I LOVE mine! I had my 305 about 2 years before I got my first bike. It was a no-brainer to get the cadence/speed sensor and make it a bike computer, too. It really shines during duathlons. :D

My brother just ordered one, too. He wants to start paying closer attention to his HR when he runs and have it for his bike when he rides.

JennK13
01-19-2011, 03:52 PM
For those of you who have it, how accurate is the GPS? Any problems with it dropping? Overall it got great reviews, but I read quite a few that mentioned issues with the GPS tracking in mountains, around tall buildings, with cloud cover.....while DH is getting more into fitness and tracking his HR, the GPS is the main reason I purchased that particular model (I have SUUNTO watch/heart rate monitor).

zoom-zoom
01-19-2011, 05:05 PM
I haven't had issues with clouds, but it can be flaky if one is in a steep ravine, between tall buildings, or under heavy tree cover (I mean REALLY heavy--I run in pretty dense forests sometimes and it's still good as long as I'm not in a ravine). Most of the time it's pretty good, though. And on a bike with the cadence/speed sensor it will also track distance from rear wheel revolutions, just like a standard bike computer, so there is always that measurement if the GPS craps out on the bike.

OakLeaf
01-19-2011, 05:28 PM
I don't think any of Garmin's sports computers are WAAS enabled, which means none of them are going to be able to receive much in the city. I don't know about other brands, but I suspect it's the same thing.

Satellite reception is line of sight. If there's no WAAS and no view of the sky (like in the mountains), then no GPS will work.

I've never had trouble with clouds, and the newer "high-sensitivity" receivers (I'm pretty sure the 305 has the same receiver as my 705) do quite well under porous cover like wet trees. I do have trouble with power line interference ... that's where the cadence/wheel sensor comes in handy.

surgtech1956
01-20-2011, 09:59 AM
I bought myself a Forerunner 305 for Xmas and was just thinking about the cadence/speed sensor. Does this come with the handlebar mount too or is this separate? Thanks

MCAP
01-20-2011, 11:36 AM
The handlebar mount is separate. It comes in the quick mount kit which is around $20-$25 on Amazon. The quick mount kit has a velcro wristband and the bike mount. The face of the watch clips into either the wristband or the bike mount.

KimmyC
01-20-2011, 11:58 AM
I have an edge 500 and I am glad I got it. Along with the cadence sensor, it has everything I will ever need. Most if not all of the time, it is is super accurate. It evens says how accurate it is, like 10 ft or 17 ft accuracy. And it has never dropped a signal!

zoom-zoom
01-20-2011, 01:48 PM
The handlebar mount is separate. It comes in the quick mount kit which is around $20-$25 on Amazon. The quick mount kit has a velcro wristband and the bike mount. The face of the watch clips into either the wristband or the bike mount.

There is also a mount that I like that is sorta a pseudo wrist. I use this most of the time, since the quick-release mount is sorta reputed to not always hold the unit well. I only use the quick-release for races.

MCAP
01-20-2011, 02:05 PM
Well I used my new Garmin at the trainer group session last night. The heart rate monitor read just fine. I couldn't get the speed/cadence sensor to work because it kept picking up everyone else's wireless sensors. I'll have to sync it before everyone gets there today. It's pretty neat to see the heartrate graph afterwards. Now I just need to figure out what all this thing does!

azfiddle
01-20-2011, 04:39 PM
I love my Garmin 305. I've had it a little over a year. I never have problems in the Tucson area, but while we were vacationing in N. California and the Pacific northwest, it sometimes gave me really screwy readings for the % grades.

I have used the artificial wrist for a year, but I have broken 3 of the rubber wrist straps, and am just about to try the other style of mount...

zoom-zoom
01-20-2011, 05:41 PM
I love my Garmin 305. I've had it a little over a year. I never have problems in the Tucson area, but while we were vacationing in N. California and the Pacific northwest, it sometimes gave me really screwy readings for the % grades.

GPS doesn't do elevation figures with any degree of accuracy...at all. For that one would need an altimeter. I think Suunto has a GPS/altimeter combo, but for a LOT more dough (like 3-4x the price of the 305).

Mr. Bloom
01-20-2011, 06:15 PM
Yes, the data graphs can be neat. Hopefully you won't have an experience like Mr. SR500 in a Feb '09 post after he hit a car:eek:





The Garmin info was really cool. I had accelerated from about 19 mph to about 23.5 mph in anticipation of the light. Then I hit the brakes and was going about 17 mph at impact (it didn't feel anywhere near that fast). At the point of impact speed dropped to 0, but my heart rate jumped about 20 beats per minute. Wild to see it recorded.


:D:D

OakLeaf
01-20-2011, 06:44 PM
The Garmin 705 has a barometric altimeter. Now that they've come out with the 800, I'd expect you'd be able to find 705s at a relative bargain, but they're always going to run you higher than a 305.

As long as we're complaining about weather conditions ... in the rain, water droplets will block the air holes that feed the barometric altimeter on the 705, and you will lose that functionality. (You'll probably also drown your cadence sensor, but that's another complaint. :rolleyes:) Not sure if they figured out a fix for that in the 800.

Oddly, I've been using my iMapMyRun on my HTC Incredible to track my walks, and for whatever reason, in my current flat environment, I get much more accurate elevation on that than I do with my Garmin 310. Obviously it's their correction algorithm and/or known comparison points, since the phone doesn't have a barometric altimeter either, but it's pretty interesting. I'll have to do some comparison when I get back to the hill country.

Catrin
02-21-2011, 05:06 AM
Does anyone have the 305 with HRM? I am probably dreaming looking at Garmin considering I've shot my bike budget for some time to come with the new bike but it is attractive...

I go back and forth between the 305 and wanting the 705 with maps but I wonder if I could even SEE the maps... and I would have paper maps for real exploring. My Oakley prescription sunglasses do not have a bifocal :o

OakLeaf
02-21-2011, 05:17 AM
The little screen is not much use for on-bike navigation, even with reading glasses. If you zoom out enough to see the "big picture," the screen is so crowded that you really can't see the little roads you want to ride, or read their names. So you still want paper maps for that. For navigating a route you've programmed, you get a tone and a big arrow before each upcoming turn. Depending on the light and how much magnification you need, you may or may not be able to zoom in enough to read the road names without glasses. It's plenty for me.

For me, the bottom line is that if I need to look hard at the map, I really need to pull over (car, moto or bici), and once I'm pulled over, I can pop out the credit-card-sized magnifier I keep in my jersey pocket if I need it. (Gotta have that for restaurant menus, anyway. :cool:)

Not that I'm trying to enable you or anything. :rolleyes: But did you see how much cooler the new Garmin 800s are? ;)

Catrin
02-21-2011, 05:22 AM
Not that I'm trying to enable you or anything. :rolleyes: But did you see how much cooler the new Garmin 800s are? ;)

Ooooo, sweet! I also see it has a version with both HRM and cadence. It might not be this year, but I do think one will eventually join my electronic toy...errrrrr....stable :)

It is also true that I would have issues with some paper maps without magnification as well :o

luv2climb
02-21-2011, 10:22 AM
I LOVE my Edge 500! Especially the % grade feature. I'm usually too busy looking at that to notice my heart rate skyrocketing on climbs:D

macski
02-21-2011, 02:31 PM
Not that I'm trying to enable you or anything. :rolleyes: But did you see how much cooler the new Garmin 800s are? ;)

I got the Garmin 800 for Christmas (thanks DP - I'm assuming that DH means dear husband so in my case it's dear partner) and it is sooooo easy to use. I love it. :)

DMC
02-25-2011, 07:22 PM
I have the 305 and the sensor. The GPS works a treat, and has been my running/outdoor cycling watch for 2 years now, but I CAN'T get it to sync up with the cadence sensor! My team is on trainers for the winter, so it doesn't help that there are 30 bikes/30 signals in the room, but I couldn't even get it to sync outside of the class.

any tips? It has NEVER worked for me, but the lights flash and everything when I try to sync, so I don't think its dead. I'm tired of watching other people's legs for cadence and not having training stats to log!

Blueberry
02-25-2011, 07:24 PM
Have you tried changing the battery in the cadence sensor? That's where I'd start. Does it sync with a HRM? Can you try someone else's sensor?

DMC
02-26-2011, 04:10 AM
syncs with the HR monitor, and the cadence lights flash when I spin the crank, so I wouldn't think it was the battery, but I'll try changing it.

ridebikeme
02-26-2011, 06:25 AM
I'm not sure whether this is helpful or not, so please correct me if I am totally off base. I know that when heart rate monitors first came out, they had issues with interference... especially with other cyclists being in a close proximity to you. I still find that issue to some degree in the shop trainer class, although generally I set up the bikes a bit apart and in a diagonal pattern and it stops. Anyway, I wonder for those in you in shop trainer sessions, if this could be the same case? Are you too close to each other and that's why there are problems with the units not reading?

I'll keep following this discussion and see what those of you in trainer classes have to say about it. Although I haven't bought a Garmin (yet) I'm thinking that the 800 might become a part of my stable as well. :cool:

Susan126
02-26-2011, 06:38 AM
I got a Garmin 800 from my hubby for my birthday. I love it! Here is one of my rides I downloaded onto the Garmin connect site:

One of my rides from my house and back. (http://connect.garmin.com/activity/67727575)

My favorite feature is the "play" feature on the top right which allows you to relive your ride.

:)

chicago
02-26-2011, 07:13 AM
okay, wait, isn't the forerunner for running, I'm confused:rolleyes:

I have the Edge 705... that I know is for biking? I also had a forerunner back in the day when I ran marathons... isn't the forerunner for running?

zoom-zoom
02-26-2011, 08:37 AM
okay, wait, isn't the forerunner for running, I'm confused:rolleyes:

I have the Edge 705... that I know is for biking? I also had a forerunner back in the day when I ran marathons... isn't the forerunner for running?

Yes...and no. The FR 305 primarily for running, but the same cadence/speed/distance sensor that one can use with any wireless Garmin unit also works with the Forerunner. It has 3 sport modes: running, cycling, and other (for XC skiing or any other dry activity). The newer 310XT is even safe to use in water, so triathletes can use them during all 3 legs of a race.

I LOVE my FR 305 both for running and as a cycling computer. It's really awesome for duathlons.

DMC, are you getting no numbers at all from the sensor, or just some of them? When I put my bike on the trainer in late Fall I was only getting cadence, but no distance/speed. Somehow over the Summer the spoke magnet got bumped out of alignment...I never noticed, since the Garmin was using the satellite info for distance and speed.

luv2climb
02-26-2011, 09:04 AM
I'm not sure whether this is helpful or not, so please correct me if I am totally off base. I know that when heart rate monitors first came out, they had issues with interference... especially with other cyclists being in a close proximity to you. I still find that issue to some degree in the shop trainer class, although generally I set up the bikes a bit apart and in a diagonal pattern and it stops. Anyway, I wonder for those in you in shop trainer sessions, if this could be the same case? Are you too close to each other and that's why there are problems with the units not reading?
Last summer I was getting ready to climb Donner Pass Road in the Sierras. Another cyclist was a few feet away. I fired up the Edge 500 and it locked on to the other cyclist's HR strap. I couldn't get it to pair with my HR strap until I rebooted it.

OakLeaf
02-26-2011, 10:18 AM
DMC, have you tried clearing the sensor data from your receiver and re-trying it (i.e., turn off cadence sensor, re-start the unit, then turn it back on again)?

DMC
02-26-2011, 12:44 PM
Tried synching outside of the class today, but I was only 6 feet outside of the door, so it was still giving me 'multiple sensor units'. I found one teammate with a garmin, and he's never had trouble synching. We guessed that it was because his has been synched before, so it was easier to lock onto his sensor.

OakLeaf: Definitely worth a try. I left the bike in the team bike room, so I'll have to try that the next time I'm up there.