You can trust Cyclingnews
Our experts spend countless hours testing cycling tech and will always share honest, unbiased advice to help you choose. Find out more about how we test.
Like almost every performance oriented cyclist it’s hard for me to imagine riding without a bike computer, despite an extended period where I tried to see if it would change my enjoyment if I went without. I’ve tested many of them in my time here, and in my riding career before I joined Cyclingnews, from the wonderfully old school Cateye magnet odometer days, through the classic Garmin Edge 500 and 520 models, to the modern Hammerhead Karoo range, and every one of Wahoo’s latest cohort (Elemnt Bolt, Elemnt Roam, and the massive and quite dumb Elemnt Ace).
Standalone bike computer reviews are perfectly good resources, but ultimately the market for them is small, and dominated by two players: Wahoo and Garmin. This means that if you’re looking to buy a mid range bike computer there’s a very high chance you’re deliberating between the Wahoo Elemnt Roam 3 and the Garmin Edge 850. With this in mind, I’ve put several months of testing in using both models to try and make sure you get the best bang for your buck and spend your hard-earned cash in the right place.
Specs
| Header Cell – Column 0 |
Garmin Edge 850 |
Wahoo Elemnt Roam 3 |
|---|---|---|
|
Size |
55 x 92 x 17mm |
53 x 96 x 24mm |
|
Weight (measured) |
113.1g/3.99oz |
109.6g/3.87oz |
|
Screen size |
2.7″ |
2.8″ |
|
Screen resolution |
420 x 600 pixels |
320 x 480 pixels |
|
RRP |
£469.99 / $599.99 |
£399.99 / $464.99 |
|
Internal memory |
64GB |
64GB |
|
Touchscreen |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Waterproof rating |
IPX7 |
IPX7 |
|
Battery life (claimed) |
36hrs |
25hrs |
|
Charge whilst recording |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Incident detection |
Yes |
No |
|
Bell |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Strava live segments |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Wireless payment |
Yes |
No |
|
Google/Apple map sharing |
No |
Yes (but I couldn’t get it to work) |
|
Live track |
Yes |
Yes |
Screen
While you probably could watch Netflix quite happily on the massive Elemnt Ace if it were able to run other apps, bike computer screens are not TV screens and bigger and higher resolution doesn’t actually matter as much as clear layout and easy visuals.
Article continues…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at CyclingNews RSS Feed…



