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The Garmin Edge® Explore 2 is a lightweight, easy-to-use GPS cycling computer featuring a bright 3” touchscreen visible in all conditions, preloaded bike-specific maps for on- and off-road navigation, and seamless eBike compatibility. It offers advanced safety features like incident detection and rider tracking, plus sensor support for heart rate and cadence, making it the perfect companion for millennial professionals seeking smart, connected, and confident cycling adventures.



















| ASIN | B0B276QYNM |
| Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
| Best Sellers Rank | #11,878 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #3 in Cycling GPS Units |
| Color | White |
| Connectivity technologies | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars (441) |
| Date First Available | July 13, 2022 |
| Department | mens |
| Human Interface Input | Touchscreen |
| Item Weight | 4.1 ounces |
| Item model number | 010-02703-00 |
| Manufacturer | Garmin |
| OS | Windows |
| Other display features | Wireless |
| Product Dimensions | 2.2 x 4.1 x 0.9 inches |
| Special features | Bluetooth |
| Whats in the box | Edge Explore 2, standard mount, USB/power cable, documentation |
| Wireless communication technologies | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
T**N
Everything I need, very little I don't
The Edge Explore 2 is exactly the right system for someone who wants a simple package that will take in data from all your sensors. Mine is linked to my heart rate strap, my indoor trainer, the cadence/speed sensor on one bike, and the cadence-only sensor on another. The display is a good and useable size without being ridiculously big. Setup and use is simple for a tech-challenged guy like myself. And with the ability to link through the Garmin Connect app on my iPhone, it's easy to transfer the data to iHealth and Strava. I'm able to set it up to track and display exactly what I need develop my workouts. Essentially, it's everything I need without extraneous stuff. The longest ride I've done with it so far is about 30 miles on hilly terrain at 8,500+ feet MSL, and the ride barely made a dent in the battery life. By the way, the interface is a blend of touch-screen and three buttons. It's intuitive and easy to learn.
W**Y
Great bike GPS - easy to use
Have used for about two months now - over 500 miles. Easy to use - big plus is the Garmin tracking features so wife doesn't worry where I am 2.5 hours into a 75 mile ride. I def. recommend. Good battery life - easy to navigate while riding, numerous data display options.
J**E
Awesome for the dollar cost.
Works great for navigation and pairs perfectly with my Garmin connect app on my cellphone. Other great features as a well. Also pairs with my Garmin rtl 515 radar light. Nice touch screen and screen size.
P**4
Gets better with time
Despite my initial disappointment with this item (see below), I decided to try it for a few more days before returning it and ended up keeping it. Here's why. I tried to use it in a dense city and was expecting Google maps-like navigation. That isn't what this is for and if that's what you need, use Google maps. This device needs a relatively good view of the sky, and doesn't update your position as much as a phone does (it seems). I decided to trust it to navigate a ~35 mile ride outside of the city. I designed the route on gpx.studio and uploaded it to the device through the garmin connect website. It's a little buggy but I got it to work. From there it becomes available on my phone, then syncs to the unit. On this ride, navigation was much better. Still took some getting used to, but it was functional. My recommendation is to spend some time learning how to use this thing, and learning how it gives instructions. Updating from 2 to 4 stars; I like it, and don't ride without it now. ---Original Review--- I've been serious about cycling for about a year now and after riding with some friends who had bike computers and seeing how much easier it was to do long, complex rides, decided it was time to get one. I compared options from wahoo, hammerhead, and garmin, and ultimately settled on this one. I mostly wanted a computer to help me navigate, don't really care about advanced fitness tracking. The reviews I found said this was great for navigation. With a large screen and plenty of ways to search for desitnations, it seemed good. Upon receiving the unit I took it out for a quick 5 mile ride. The fitness tracking features worked well; it was neat to see my (GPS-estimated) speed, total distance, time, and a trace of my route. The issues started when I tried to do some navigation. There are a few ways to configure the device in terms of routing. You can choose short routes, easy routes, and routes based on popularity (from data garmin collects). I live in a large bike friendly city on the east coast in the US, and the edge explore 2 had a lot of problems even picking a route to get me where I wanted to go. In one instance, it told me to cross a river using a bridge, cross the street, the take the bridge back over to where I started, albeit on the other side of the road. I could have just crossed the road. In general, the navigation lags behind my actual position significantly enough that I missed turns. This especially matters when riding in a city where turns come up fast and cars are not patient. It also gave me a few directions to go the wrong way down one-way streets and to ride in very pedestrian-heavy areas. I kept missing turns because of the lag and got so frustrated with it that I gave up trying to navigate with it and found my own way home. Though I was able to tune the route planning algorithm to give me more desirable routes, its abysmal live navigation renders them ineffective. When you inevitably miss a turn, it will try to reroute you back onto the course it already has, rather than adjust the entire route accordingly as google maps would. I understand that this is more appropriate for the computational abilities of the device, but its still annoying. The final straw for me came when I tried to update the maps using my computer. I thought that this might solve some of the navigation issues I was having. I downloaded the software from the garmin website, plugged in the edge explore 2, and found a 6GB map update ready for installation. Perfect. Except...I made numerous attempts to install the update and all of them failed with a non-descriptive error message. At this point I had no interest in coddling this device any more and decided to return it. ------ I do want to speak briefly about the ecosystem around this device for those that are still considering it. You can install an app on your phone, which your rides sync to over bluetooth. The app will then estimate how many calories you burn per day and stuff. Neat if you're into it. I was mostly interested in the ability to create a route on the app (or garmin connect website) and load it onto the computer. The route designer worked just okay, both on mobile and web. What surprised me, though, was the inability to export routes from garmin connect. This includes both routes ridden and routes planned. As someone who likes to play with data myself, I was disappointed that I could not export a .gpx file or something. One last comment, because I had this question and could not find the answer anywhere. Yes this unit has a compass screen, but it only displays heading. There is no magnetometer. So if you get confused by "ride to trail" instructions and don't know which way to head when starting your ride, you might get frustrated with this unit as I did. If you want a true digital compass, go for the edge 530 or edge 830.
D**K
Garmin Edge Explore 2
The Garmin Explore 2 has been a difficult navigating device to use. The three big negatives. 1) Very complicated interface for a navigation GPS. 2) Terrible routes, always generating routes on high speed roads when they're are many low speed side streets available. 3) Very slow Bluetooth interface. Updates are very slow, need several hours to complete an update. This unit only supports Bluetooth connections. Which means it is slow to communicate. Downloading a firmware update takes a very long time. It took me 3 days to get the update on this year. It takes several hours but the problem is I get interrupted with a call or I need to run. It does save where you left off. But it still takes a lot of time. Wifi is much quicker but this unit does not support wifi. As a navigation device it lacks in a few areas. For starters, getting to the map screen on the Garmin app makes it look like navigation was an afterthought. Garmin Explore 2 Steps to get to the Map: Open app, there is a home page with 5 links on the bottom. 1) Home 2) Challenges 3) Calendar 4) News Feed 5) More Oddly to get to the Map you need to choose More. Why more on a GPS ?? Seems like Calendar or News Feed would be a More… After choosing More, then there are around 15 items to choose from. Need to choose Training & Planning down into the menu Then another menu is displayed with 6 items to choose from. Choose Courses and that takes you to a listing of courses you have created. Need to click on Create Course. Then choose a Course type among 7. I chose Gravel/Unpaved Cycling. That takes you to another menu of 2 choices. Choosing Custom will finally bring up a Map. My question, why so menus to get to a map on a navigation GPS? That is crazy. At that point you need to choose a starting point. On the Garmin, you need to pick it. There is no address entry so you need to zoom out and move around to find your final location. The garmin unit has an overcomplicated menu/screen system. Screens scroll up, down, left, and right. Some screens have menus with multi screens and some do not. Some screens scroll up and some do not. So you scroll right one screen then try scroll up and then down. Then you can scroll right again then try scroll up/down. It's a complex web of screens that drive you crazy. To find a screen is not easy. Getting to the home page is a challenge. The screen size is 3" but the map screen has a graphic block on top and the bottom . Which makes the viewable map smaller. But it's still viewable but certainly not a 3" map. Overall the screen size is small. Comparing to a phone screen this will seem very small. It's usable but the map you have on your phone is way easier to read and to navigate around. The routing is a big letdown. It's chooses 45MPH streets often. And it routes you down fast roads with no shoulder for miles. Even when there are side streets available it chooses the high speed road. It appears to avoid bike paths unless they are the shortest possible route. This can be tested from the app, I believe you can download the app and test the routing before buying this device. Some locations may do better routing. The best routes are what others have shared. The Garmin routes are really bad. It looks like it uses routes made for cars rather than bikes. The default settings require users to restart the timer after each stop. That drives me crazy, this is a GPS. My simple bike odometer/timer does all that automatically. I think Garmin is overthinking the timer. I say keep it simple, the speed goes to zero, stop the timer. The speed increases above zero then start the timer. Why do I need to keep pressing the large timer start button on the screen after every stop at an intersection. While the screen has street names, only some street names are displayed, not all the streets. Since I try to mostly ride bike pathes, the road/path names are unnamed on the device. The display screen is easy to read. Just wish the routing was better and the interface could be simplified. I own several Garmin type GPS devices and they are great and easy to use. This device however is nothing like them and has an overly complicated interface. This is a difficult device to use as a GPS navigator. I say pass on this device if navigation is your need.
J**W
I have been cycling with various versions of bike computers for many years. This unit is capable of working with newer, more recent bike tech such as mobile phone connectivity for others following you while riding, adding devices such cadence/speed sensors, radars, lights, etc. While this doesn't have the level of analytics if you are into higher end / more intense training, but all the basics are there and then some. GPS is excellent, and tracking routes, etc. works fine. No live Strava for those who wish to have that, but you will pay much more for those kinds of features. The screen is incredibly easy to read in direct sunlight, and while this isn't cheap, as a dedicated device, it handles the job. Some might prefer a mobile phone app option, but then you could be limited to things such as lower screen brightness, limitations on sensor connectivity, faffing between apps, etc. For the money, this has been a great riding companion - especially for my riding habits which are get out on the road or gravel path, ride for an hour or two and
M**H
If you are planning to commute, this device will add double the time. Routing makes no sense, I think it’s assuming I’m driving in the street instead of on bike paths. I have modified the settings to seek the fastest route and use high traffic roads. But still, there is not a single course it gives me that is not at least twice as long as necessary.
V**O
Fácil de usar, trae mapas de México, solo los tienes que descargar los conectando lo a una pc y seleccionar los, compatible con censores ant, fácil de navegar, este es para uso de excursión o viejas, no puedes cargar entrenamientos como los otros de alta gama, clime pro es una gran ayuda en las subidas, la batería le dura de 14 a 15 horas, lo puedes usar y cargando al mismo tiempo con un powerbank, puedes controlar lámpara garmim y radares también, ajustas el nivel de luz a tu gusto, y cuanto tiempo dura la luz de la pantalla encendida, en el día la pantalla es vien visible y no se refleja con el sol, se ve muy bien.
C**A
Dopo un periodo iniziale di settaggio é diventato il mio compagno inseparabile per quando vado in bici
Y**Y
ガーミンからのコメント 海外版製品は、電波法の関する技術基準適合証明認定のマーク(技適マーク)が貼付されていないため、日本国内での利用は違法となります。
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2 weeks ago
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