Garmin Edge 705 GPS-Enabled Cycling Computer

Posted on 21 June 2010

Garmin Edge 705 GPS-Enabled Cycling Computer (Includes Heart Rate Monitor and Speed/Cadence Sensor)

GARMIN Edge 705 Speed/ Cade Outdoor Fitness GPS. Wherever you go, you can bring it on with the Garmin Edge 705 navigating trainer. Edge 705 pushes you to do your best, then shows you the way back. This GPS enabled cycle computer knows no limits. Get heart rate, cadence, turn by turn directions, power data /from ANT plus Sport enabled third party power meters/ the works. Even share your data with other Edge 705 buddies after your ride. All wireless with a color display, this is no ordinary cycle computer.

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2 Responses to “Garmin Edge 705 GPS-Enabled Cycling Computer”

  1. Naeva says:

    I’ve had my 705 for about 3 weeks and have used it on over 400 miles of bike training. It’s a great bike computer - very easy to setup, lots of data available, but only the data you decide to have on each screen. The GPS and in-unit maps are great. Installation is also easy since the sensor is wireless.

    The Garmin Training Center software (Windows version in my case) is okay, but appears to have only basic integration with the 705 so far. GTC is a separate, but free, download from the Garmin site. Hopefully future versions will provide more/better 705 integration.

    Something to watch out for as it isn’t mentioned in the 705 docs or on the Garmin site, if you buy the 705 with the map card, those detailed maps will only be available in the 705, not in GTC. If you want detailed maps in GTC, you have to buy a PC/Mac version of the very same maps you have on the 705. That’s another $100-130 on top of the $600-700 you just spent on the 705. Why? Ask Garmin.

  2. Anonymous says:

    Rating is more like 3.5 stars:
    It is an expensive unit, but there’s not much on the market that has so many features. Most early adopters will have fun playing with this device.
    It is remarkably light given the number of features - in fact, it is as light as my small previous computer, given its cadence sensor was wired (wire weight adds up quickly).

    First, the positives:
    -installation on Mac OS X was flawless - the SW has some major issues (below),
    -device setup (both HW and profiles) was trivial
    -customizable screens on a LOT of data.

    The negatives
    -I doubt (no trials yet) the battery will last 15 hours with the backlight on, even for brief moments. I think Garmin knows this, which may be why the unit will not remember your backlight % strength setting: it will drop to 0% each and every time you sync the unit
    -The screen is all but unreadable without the backlight at 100%, and, even then, is hard to read, in a common case: when the device itself is in shadow (your own, cast over it from riding on the hoods of a road bike), but full sun is out (presumably the rider is wearing sunglasses)
    -The mounting bracket is the weakest I’ve seen in a long time. There’s a huge amount of play between the unit and the mount - and it’s all plastic, with a single tiny plastic “foot” that keeps the unit from flying off - so: at least on my road bike, it rattles quite loudly on occasion (on pavement). The mount itself will quickly starting rotating around the handlebar (horizontal mount) unless you carefully place your own compression in the right places by the cheap plastic ties included.
    -There’s no temperature reading. This is quite strange, given the unit is feature rich, and the barometer should be temperature compensated.
    -As the prior reviewer commented, the prebundled street maps are unviewable in Garmin Training Center. Since this is where you would add course notes (I am not sure of their purpose: they don’t appear on the unit as far as I can tell), where detail matters, it makes course notes - and all the map viewing - really weak, as far as I can tell. On OS X, there is not option to overlay on Google Earth (presumably Windows users can).
    -Even though it’s somewhat pointless due to lack of accuracy, there’s no estimated power. One must purchase ANT+sport enabled power units separately. The current list are good ones, but they are very expensive.
    -SW has a few bugs here and there, especially GTC, and Garmin Connect … even a few on the unit. I am sure these will be fixed in several months or so.

    [Update: Garmin must receive a major demerit for their ability to manage software. Over the course of a year, they've fixed only a small fraction of the SW bugs on the unit and in GTC, and, in once case, introduced a new major flaw (the entire left hand pane of GTC wouldn't update), and took over 4 months to repair it. Ironically, the only fix in this update was this bug they introduced. This unit still has several very annoying SW flaws, a year+ into its release. The good news is, I suppose, none of them fatal - those have been fixed]


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