I just took the plunge and bought a Garmin Edge 800 GPS device. It arrived this morning. I went in kind of blind, so I was hoping to get some advice on which maps I should buy and what accessories would be useful. I've checked the Garmin site, but I'd like some guidance on which maps are worth it and what formats to use.
My main use for it will be the longer touring rides outside of Chicago. I stick to roads and paved or crushed limestone trails, and so far haven't ventured outside of IL, IN, MI, and WI. I want to be able to use to find my way if I just start out with a destination in mind and no idea what route to take (and also to put planned routes on it of course).
Can I fit multiple maps on the device itself, or do I need to use SD cards? Is the BirdsEye Satellite Imagery subscription worth getting (my screen is rather small)? Thanks for any help.
Tags:
I have had the 800 since it was released, and previously the 750
I purchased the large bundle with the heart rate strap, the speed/cadence sensor and the US maps on a micro sd card
The speed cadence sensor is only needed if you either train indoors or want the cadence reading while outdoors
heart rate strap is your choice, I like having that info while training
As far as the maps go the US maps on a micro sd card is around 100 bucks, the maps can be "found" on the internet if your into that kind of thing.
The internal storage will fill up quick with area maps and the birdseye view data
For making courses and routes I use garmin base camp, it is a free download and makes maps in the tcx or gpx format
Lastly I use a quarg power meter crank set to send my power and cadence info to the garmin
It is a great device with more capabilities then most people will use
Take advantage of garmin connect to upload your rides , it saves them in the "cloud" so you can access from any computer
here is a sample from my last ride
http://connect.garmin.com/dashboard?cid=1356652
you can friend me to ask me any specific questions
Jeff,
I have been using a GPS for bikes, kayaks and environmental surveys for over ten years. Your system is more advanced than any of mine. I think you made a good purchase with City Navigator because the stock maps on system do not have the less traveled roads I like to bike on.
If you get into building your routes at home and following then on the bike; the Rails-to-Trails might be a great help. For example: I cannot tell my GPS ( Garmin Etrex ) to follow the Burnham Greenway because it only routes to roads and streets. I would have to do it manually setting points. If you do not aim for bike trails then you will not need it.
The class sounds like a great idea. You likely will not master all the functions after the one hour class, but you should see most of the things your system can do. Just knowing what your system can do is a great help in learning how to do it later.
With all those cool functions, mapping in color , tracking,routing, cadence, ETA, Heart Rate, barometric altimeter... do not forget to pedal :)
stay connected,
Elwood
203 members
1 member
270 members
1 member
261 members