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Garmin watch faces battery
Garmin watch faces battery











  1. #GARMIN WATCH FACES BATTERY BLUETOOTH#
  2. #GARMIN WATCH FACES BATTERY PLUS#

The watch also provides suggested workouts based on your recent training history. You can easily set up structured workouts and training plans, and there’s a host of training load and recovery features, too, so you can see how much or how little you’ve been training. The watch supports all the latest Garmin fitness and health features, too, including Body Battery – a neat way of gauging your energy levels, based on a number of factors – and the recently improved Fitness Age feature, which attempts to place an age on your fitness levels, no matter how long you’ve actually spend on this Earth. There’s support for third-party apps, too, via the Garmin IQ Store and also, naturally, monitoring for steps, floors climbed, calories burned and sleep. That means tracking modes for all the sports you can think of, including those modes that cheaper watches often omit, such as golf, triathlon and open water swimming modes. In terms of what the Enduro can track and the features, training tools and analysis it provides, that’s pretty much on a par with Garmin’s other high-end sports watches, too, with a couple of key exceptions, as detailed in the next section. It’s also good that you get access to some kind of web-based platform, which is more than can be said for Coros watches, for instance. The less said about the rather brutish design of Garmin Connect the better, in my opinion, but at least it’s easy to get to grips with. The UI on the watch is straightforward to use – if you’ve used a recent Garmin from the Forerunner or Fenix range, you’ll know exactly what to do – and the same goes for the Garmin Connect app and website. If you want access to running dynamics metrics or automatic lactic threshold detection, for instance, you need to use Garmin accessories.īeyond the hardware, the differences between the Enduro and Garmin’s other high-end watches are fairly minimal. It’s worth noting, however, that you might miss out on extra features if you choose not to buy a Garmin-branded sensor.

#GARMIN WATCH FACES BATTERY BLUETOOTH#

Naturally, given the high-end nature of the watch, the Enduro is also compatible with Bluetooth and ANT+ external sensors, including cycling power meters, heart-rate chest belts and running pods, from both Garmin and third-party manufacturers.

#GARMIN WATCH FACES BATTERY PLUS#

Also included are a digital compass, gyroscope and altimeter, plus a thermometer and accelerometer for counting your steps. The latest version of Garmin’s Elevate heart-rate monitor keeps tabs on your beats per minute and can also monitor your blood oxygen saturation, via either spot checks or continual all day/sleep monitoring. Position, speed and distance data is supplied by a radio that supports the GPS, GLONASS, Galileo and the QZSS satellite systems. Inside, there’s all the sensor hardware you’d expect, too. The buttons are in the same places as they are on most of the firm’s other serious athlete-focused wearables, with three on the left edge and two on the right, and these provide quick and responsive access to all the watch’s many, many functions.

garmin watch faces battery

Otherwise, the Enduro is typical high-end Garmin sports watch fare. It’s double-ended so you need to detach it at both ends before you can take it off, but this does add a little extra peace of mind. This is both comfortable and holds the watch very securely to your wrist. One thing that’s slightly unusual about the Enduro is that, instead of the usual silicon, buckle-based wristband, it comes with a slightly stretchy nylon hook and loop strap. It feels as tough as nails and is also waterproof to 10 ATM (100 metres). The watch body itself is built from plastic and the bezel is available in either stainless steel or “diamond-like carbon” coated titanium, with the latter adding £100 to the asking price. It’s exceptionally clear and sharp, too, with a resolution of 280 x 280 pixels. It employs Garmin’s solar glass charging tech to top that battery up while you’re out and about, and the display itself – one of Garmin’s excellent full-colour, always-on, sunlight-visible units – is the largest in the range at 1.4in across. The Enduro delivers the best battery life in the Garmin range, with up to 80 hours of continuous GPS usage and a mind-boggling 65 days in “smartwatch” mode (ie, without the GPS or heart-rate monitor in use).

garmin watch faces battery

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Garmin watch faces battery