🚴♂️ Explore More, Worry Less — Your Ultimate Ride Companion
The Garmin Edge Explore is a lightweight, unisex GPS bike computer featuring a bright 3” glove- and rain-friendly touchscreen, preloaded with Garmin Cycle Map and Trend line popularity routing for optimized navigation. It tracks distance, speed, elevation, and location with up to 12 hours of battery life. Compatible with Garmin Varia smart bike lights and rear-view radar, it enhances rider safety with incident detection and real-time connectivity through Live Track and rider messaging.
Department | Unisex |
Manufacturer | Garmin |
Item model number | 010-02029-10 |
Product Dimensions | 5.5 x 1.8 x 10.5 cm; 116 g |
ASIN | B07DX231ST |
Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
S**N
Very happy, nice bit of kit at a good price
After having my edge 705 for 10 plus years the battery was not holding charge. Sadly this meant I had to try to find a replacement. The edge explore came after weeks of looking, thinking, looking some more and a load more thinking!I decided to go with it and the 5 payment option was a deal clincher! Straight out the box it had battery charge (around 75%) so it was ready to go.Easy to set up and put familiar screens together with data. Maps are good, syncing to apps easy and also linking to cadence & HRM a breeze.Overall very happy and would recommend if you like me, was in need of making a new purchase. Would suggest buying a case to go with it just to add some extra protection.
A**R
Excellent Bike Computer
This is a very good bike computer for those wanting a simple navigation aid for cycling on road or gravel trails without the need for power meter statistics etc. Easy to use and accurate to follow.
M**K
Great GPS as long as you are aware of it's limitations.
I don't usually write reviews however I just had a great day mountain biking in Wales and I thought I should share my experience using the Garmin Edge Explore.I needed something to get me around unmarked routes as I had a bad experience with mobile phone mounts. This device is small enough and fits nicely on my handlebar and seems very secure once locked. I had 2 reservations about this device one being a 2018 model it now seems outdated and the second was battery life as many users reported their battery going flat after 3-4 hours. I am happy to say that today's ride was 5.5 hours I had 55% remaining when I got back. The battery life is not an issue if updating to the latest firmware. Going back to the first point, this is a basic GPS with Bluetooth which syncs to your phone. Think TomTom or Garmin car satnav from 10 years ago, it's clunky and feels old after using modern mobile phone. As long as you are aware of this the device itself works great and does exactly what you need it to do. You can find pre-made routes on a computer or phone or create your own using Garmin Connect, sync to the device and go for a ride. It will get you to where you need to go and back and this works great. Calorie burn shows higher than normal and there is no way to change the ride type to EMTB but this isn't a deal breaker for me as I ride a regular bike as well. I needed a device for getting me around long cross country routes and this device does exactly that, some fancy training features are missing but I didn't need those anyway. I give this 4 stars due to the outdated design, this device could do with a refresh but then again it's the cheapest bike nav out there with proper maps so can't complain too much. I hope this helps!
M**D
It's made riding more engaging somehow
This (the "Explore") is the large Garmin Edge, which emphasizes navigation over training. So it's got a nice big screen but no ability to connect a power meter. When I say "big" I don't mean it's as big as a modern mobile phone, which I find too big for the handlebars. It's as big as I want it.I think you can connect a heart rate monitor by Bluetooth, but I don't use any of that stuff so I haven't tried it. I got it for navigation, and it's good at that. You can just put a location in, like a car SatNav. Or you can use the built in course designer. Alternatively you can design a course using Komoot, which is a separate app which I prefer. You also need to download the Garmin Connect app, and set Komoot and Connect to sync to each other. Once that'ss set up, it works really well.I find that I use about 50% of the battery on a four hour ride, so it's got enough battery for most people. It uses a bit more battery if you have it constantly attached to your phone by Bluetooth. That allows some phone notifications to pop up on the Garmin. I don't bother.Note that, unlike a car SatNav, and unlike Komoot if you use it as a SatNav on your phone, there are no audio instructions. You just get warning bleeps in advance of turns or if you go off course. I like that. I hated wearing in-ear headphones to hear Komoot's instructions. There's no need for that with the Garmin. The beeps are quite high pitched, and you can generally hear them in traffic. And I prefer to rely on the visual picture of the route that the Garmin gives you. Like all SatNavs it has a few wrinkles and glitches that occasionally confuse, but in general it makes me confident about where I am and where I'm going.When I don't need navigation I still use the Garmin to record my rides, and to display a screen showing distance, speed, average speed, elevation, elapsed time and time of day. I was surprised I needed to customize it to show time of day, but it was pretty easy. I don't really know why I record my rides, since my phone automatically records them on my Google Maps timeline anyway. I just like having the data screen visible as I ride along, and I like having the weekly, monthly and annual data that the Garmin Connect app collects if you connect the Garmin to the phone by Bluetooth briefly after a ride. I particularly like the elevation data, which gives me an excuse for my unimpressive average speeds. And I think the Garmin distance data is a bit more accurate than Google Maps Timeline, which sometimes seems to short change me.None of the above really explains why I somehow just feel happier riding along with a Garmin on my handlebars, but I definitely do. By the way, I'm not saying it's better than other cycling computers. This is my first one, so I have nothing to compare it to. But I do really like it.
M**S
Excellent gadget for keeping track of cycling patterns, and very technophobe friendly!
Purchased to take my cycling to the next level and keep a eye on my progress.I am something of a technophobe, and always worried that I will mess up when trying to set up new gadgets, but this was very easy to set up and was off and running in no time.Couple of things here and there needed to look up for sorting out, but all the whole very comfortable with it.Some annoying little things, like when setting up a road map, and the route you have set up clearly has a cycle path, yet the map wants you to stick to the road, or sometimes its a little to strict to the route and will make you take a strange detour, when you know in your head there was faster and more straight forward routes.Easy to install on bike.All in all most satisfied with this.
M**N
Excellent cycling companion
This is very easy to set up and get working but the finer detail takes a while to get exactely how you want it, once fully set up it works very well, gives loads of detail, the navigation works perfectly and it links in with apps like Strava easily and automatically.Not the cheapest to buy but worth the extra in my opinion
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