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edge 705 manual downloadUsing the online preview, you can quickly view the contents and go to the page where you will find the solution to your problem with Garmin Edge 705. To start viewing the user manual Garmin Edge 705 on full screen, use the button Fullscreen. However, if you do not want to take up too much of your disk space, you can always download it in the future from ManualsBase. The option to print the manual has also been provided, and you can use it by clicking the link above - Print the manual. You do not have to print the entire manual Garmin Edge 705 but the selected pages only. paper. If you want to quickly view the content of pages found on the following pages of the manual, you can use them. Use the thumb stick to adjust the backlight level.Resetting the Edge Heart rate sensor active If yourSee charging or connecting to the Important Safety and Product a personal computer. Information guide in the product box for important battery safety tiP: The Edge will not information.The stem cap installation (shown here) provides a more sturdy location. The optional wedge should be used under the mount for a better viewing angle. 3. Plug the other end into a standard wall outlet (AC) or To install the Edge on your an available For the best reception, make Release lever sure the front of the Edge is oriented toward the sky. Top view of the Edge being 2. Wait while the Edge searches mounted on a horizontal bar for satellites. Stand still in an open area, and do not begin To release the Edge: moving until the locYou can Step 8: Go for a Ride.For example, you from an external source, back to your found a great trail ride on the Internet starting point, to Favorites, and to or another Edge owner created a points of interest.Recent Finds Your Edge stores the last 50 of your After you have reached your recent finds. They’re more like an Etch-a-Sketch than a phone with useful maps. Well, ok, I’ll be fair.http://sterenstein.ru/userfiles/cx-7-repair-manual.xml
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However said basemap believes there are (for example) only three streets in New York City, and two in Paris. No matter the case, you’re spending more money on top of what you already spent. Additionally, I’ve simplified those instructions some. It’s just that I was probably overly thorough in the screenshots. There’s a tiny bit of work to get the maps requested, which then puts you into a queue where your map request is processed and ultimately a link e-mailed to you a few hours later. Then there’s a few more minutes to copy the maps to your expansion card. Of course, there’s no reason you need to sit there and watch paint dry. Just like you wouldn’t sit and watch dough rise. I’ve tested all three Edge units using a variety of cards from 4GB to a highest capacity 32GB cards. I had no issues there with the latest firmware on any of them. Most of the maps you’ll create are less than 1GB in size, so a 16GB card is more than sufficient. All three of these units have mapping capabilities. This won’t work on the Garmin Edge 20, 25, 200, 500, or 510. Those units don’t support the mapping function. Nor will it work on any other 3rd party units. Sorry! Openstreet maps have become in many areas just as good as maps from traditional providers. And best of all, they’re free. The below site simply does all the hard-work that you used to have to do manually a few years ago if you wanted to use OpenStreet maps. Now, it’s literally as easy as 1.2.3. Which, will bring you here: Because highly detailed maps like these can be somewhat large, you’ll likely need to pickup a cheap Micro-SD card. Some smaller maps may fit directly on your Edge device, but only if you’re talking a fairly small area. For me, I like to load up maps for anywhere nearby I might ride. Tiles are ways that the entire world can be broken down into consumable map chunks.I narrowed it down to just the local area that I was likely to ride in.http://angkorphotographyguide.com/userfiles/cx-7-owners-manual.xml This would reduce my download time, as well as my transfer times later on to my device. But, if you plan to have the maps around for a while on your device, choose a larger set so you always have coverage. I’ll explain this in a second. This means it takes a bit of time, sorta like putting in an order at a restaurant. To do this it places you into a queue, and your e-mail address is simply used to notify you when your maps are ready. No worries, when it’s done it’ll send you another e-mail and you can go pickup your files then: Once there, you’ll see you have a few options.The file you downloaded is a standard Zip file, which means the actual map file is inside it. Just like a package from FedEx. So you’ll go ahead and open up the Zip file to access the map file inside (gmapsupp.img). Note, on the Edge 520, you’ll just connect your Edge 520 directly to your computer and it’ll show as a USB drive. Follow the below instructions as normal from there. First you’ll create a directory on it called GARMIN. Well, do remember to put the Micro-SD card in the slot if you haven’t done so yet. Note however that you’ve only got about 98MB of space to play with once you remove the 49MB default basemap file. And of course you want to leave some space for your actual activity files, Strava segments, courses, and workouts (all of which are tiny, a few megabytes in total). Simple math is 100KB (.1MB) per hour of GPS activity files. Let’s dive right in. Make a backup copy of this on your computer for long-term safe keeping. 4) Within the \Garmin folder on the Edge 520, delete the gmapbmap.img file (after you’ve copied it elsewhere). Note: If on a Mac, you must now empty your Trash bin, otherwise you won’t reclaim the free space.Don’t worry, just let it complete. In the unlikely event your new mapset isn’t enabled, you can do so manually. It’s pretty quick and easy.http://www.diamondsinthemaking.com/content/boss-br-900-manual And if you simply have created a course online ( you can do that free on Garmin Connect and transfer it to your Edge), then it’ll provide the map information for that course as it routes. Go forth and enjoy! Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked. If you would like a profile picture, simply register at Gravatar, which works here on DCR and across the web.Recently I loaded GPX files onto the same card for rides in Spain, but the routes did not show. What should I look for to solve this problem. Could the maps have become corrupted, and how would I determine that. On a separate card I have a map of North America which works perfectly. I have downloaded maps and placed them on my Etrex 20 successfully. Do I follow the instructions for the 520 as the Explore does not have an SD card slot.? Can you place more than one img file on the Explore, or one at a time.\ Dave An added note the “Garmin” folder is not showing up Finder (MacOS) even tho Garmin Express see the watch. Thanks I followed the directions on this page to download free maps (thank you sooo much for that too) of Australia on to the Explore. I used the directions for the Edge 520 since there is no SD Card slot on the Edge Explore. Your directions were easy to follow and I was able to load the maps on to the Edge Explore with no problem at all. I created a course using Garmin Connect and started to ride. This is where I ran in to an issue. The Garmin unit was set up to give me turn by turn instructions but even out on a dirt road with nothing around, it would beep every 30 meters and tell me to go straight. It would count down 30 meters and beep, 30 meters and beep. It was like there was a waypoint exactly every 30 meters. You can imagine how annoying this would be. I tried to change settings but nothing worked at all except stopping the course on the unit all together. I have tried everything and can’t get it to work properly. All of these still go 30 meters Beep, 30 meters Beep.http://halex-group.com/images/carrier-quietline-manual.pdf Did you find a solution for this? Thanks a lot for the thorough description. It is not visible on the map, and there are no turn by turn directions. When you have a gpx track, you can convert it to a tcx file at certain websites, for example at link to alltrails.com. You then copy it in the courses directory of your 705 (hold the name of your course short, the 705 can not work with long gpx or tcx names). Hope this will get you further! However in going on to get a new map before my cycling holiday somewhere new, I find the server is always showing as down this week. Are there any other similar options you can recommend? Can you also create maps for the 520 plus? I have never had this problem before. Thank you. Yes there is a way to change that but I’m not so smaaahrt;) However today the first ride I notice the map is not loading correctly (as in I can’t see the streets or building or anything). Am I doing anything wrong? Here are the exact steps to reproduce: Meaning,if you’re in the US you’ll get North America maps on it with heatmap data baked in. But, if you want to travel to Europe, you wouldn’t have any maps. It won’t have the heatmap data internal to it for Europe, but otherwise you’re good to go! Anybody got an alternative for Europe for the 1030? I live in California and and heading for a bike trip in Germany and Austria. I added the Austria map and named it gmapbmap-aus.img and the Germany map gmapbmap-germ.img I can’t figure out how to be sure until I’m in Germany and I’d sure like to. I have the same question! So it appears multiple maps will load.It does not have an SD card. Is it the same as your description for the 520. Many thanks Great content Same for Edge 530 too. However, the maps website appears to be down for the last month or so do you know any other way of getting maps to the device? Works so much better than Garmin Openstreetmap. Is the process the same as on the Edge 520? As I read in the comments below, the bbbike.org site works better. It took about 15 minutes to prepare and resulted in a 300MB image. It says it’s over 6m sq km. THANKS so much! I was told by RWPGS tech support two things: They believe OSM is the culprit that their lowest paid subscription will allow the turning cue text to remain the same. However the maps are on the unit, but when I switch it on there is nothing different from the standard navigation. Do I have to download something more than the gmapsupp file. I have renamed it but no luck unless I’m missing something? I tried to download new maps but can not find the gmapsupp.img in the new files. B) Did you take the files out of the zip folder. C) Did you put them in the Garmin folder The file I’ve downloaded is gmappsupp.img. where do I drop it into in the Garmin folder, is in the new file folder or elsewhere? Any other thoughts? Could someone share this content with me? Would this make a difference as to whether the maps can be downloaded or not. I note that it references “up to 32GB”. You can always try it and see what will happen. I don’t think it would hurt something: it will just not work. It’s as simple as that. Most of the time. If you’re new around these parts, here’s the long version of my story. Plus, you'll be more awesome. Click above for all the details. Oh, and you can sign-up for the newsletter here! Use Backcountry.com or Competitive Cyclist with either the coupon code DCRAINMAKER for first time users saving 15 on applicable products. No cost to you, easy as pie! No problem, the product comparison data is constantly updated with new products and new features added to old products! No problem, here's the platform I use - you can too! You should check out my videos. I take things to a whole new level of interactive depth! I cover all the units to buy (and avoid) for the 2019-2020 indoor training season. The good, the bad, and the ugly. Oh, and free US shipping too! Below are the most popular. Some reviews are over 60 pages long when printed out, with hundreds of photos. I aim to leave no stone unturned. Looking for the equipment I use day to day. And to compliment that, here’s The Girl’s (my wife’s) list. Enjoy, and thanks for stopping by! Here’s a bunch of random trip reports and daily trip-logs that I’ve put together and posted. I’ve sorted it all by world geography, in an attempt to make it easy to figure out where I’ve been. So in efforts to combat the amount of emails I need to sort through on a daily basis, I’ve complied this “ My Photography Gear ” post for your curious minds. It’s a nice break from the day to day sports-tech talk, and I hope you get something out of it! But at the end of the day, you might just be wondering “What does Ray use when not testing new products?”. So here is the most up to date list of products I like and fit the bill for me and my training needs best. DC Rainmaker 2019 swim, bike, run, and general gear list. But wait, are you a female and feel like these things might not apply to you. If that’s the case (but certainly not saying my choices aren’t good for women), and you just want to see a different gear junkies “picks”, check out The Girl’s 2018 Gear Guide too. A link to a pdf of the diet I am following is on the Diet under the About menu. Rather than trawl through 560 odd comments and replies which takes an evening I am told, far easy to read this page. It is the summation of mine and everybody’s input. It’s going to take a while but will cover all aspects of the 705. MapSource updates require an original. Comment from Stuart: You can get around Garmin saying you have to have an original Mapsource before applying the latest version as an update by unzipping the download file, then running MSMAIN.MSI then SETUP.EXE The decision you have to make is whether to buy DVD based map or a plugin MicroSD card map. DVD maps need installing and then loading on to your 705 or memory card. The advantage of a DVD map is that you can plan routes in Mapsource and you can see them in TrainingCentre. SD card maps are plug and play. They have the auto routing built into them along with all the points of interest (POI). This includes garages, restaurants, cash machines etc. They have a novelty value but you didn’t buy your 705 for them. I’ll up load a link to a tutorial. It is not for the novice computer user and things can go wrong. The level of detail that you get is very inferior to digital or paper maps as Garmin uses a vector system and OS maps are raster images. (Things are better with the Garmin Edge 800 as it uses a different mapping system where you get the raster OS maps with the routable Vector maps beneath the the OS overlay.) Without Garmin Communicator installed other programs won’t see your new toy as a device. So you can’t import or export anything. Latest Versions TrainingCenter Ver 3.5.3with AntAgent 2.2 MapSource 6.16.2 Garmin Edge 705 Ver 3.20 GPS 2.10 GarminCommunicator Plugin Ver 2.9.2 Webupdater Ver 2.4. Mapinstall Ver 3.14.2 That’s being polite, I’ve met a number of you who expressed it in harder terms. Fortunately there are others out there that do do good routing software and there are a lot of great websites out there. First off you need to know the difference between a Route and a Course You use the waypoints to mark the turns on your Route. You Navigate the Route from Waypoint to Waypoint. I’ve done rides up to 200 km using this method and it is entirely different to riding a course. Routes rely on as the crow flies (straight line) navigation between Waypoints. The compass always points to the next waypoint. When you follow the route as long as the compass screen is always roughly pointing forward you are on Route. If it is 90 degrees to you something is amiss. This can be within a 100 metres of the waypoint. A Waypoint will bleep and give you a countdown to the waypoint in distance and seconds. It’s a great way to ride if you are on limited resources ala Garmin Edge 305. See the Route planning Tutorial on this site for planning and riding a Route. It can be a saved ride. It can be planned in Mapsource, Digital OS maping software and the Google map based websites. You can race against the virtual partner as it contains speed info as well as position. File size is a lot bigger than a Route GPX file. You can save multiple Courses on a Memory Card. I’ve a dozen on mine. You can also convert your riding history to a Course within the Edge. Riding a Course is not the same as riding a Route. Your essentially reriding another ride. The only time the Edge 705 bleeps at you is when you go OFF Course. Don’t press enter but retrace your steps to rejoin the Course. Your Edge will say Course Found and the black triangle will be back on the pink Course track. There is a musical fanfare when you complete the Course. They should be in.TCX format. Limit of 50 Courses. They are Icons built into a lot Garmin Navigation products. There is a limited number to choose from and there is another 100 CoursePoint limit. They behave similar to a waypoint in that they bleep at you when you arrive at one. This is where you have to abandon Garmin products to add CoursePoints to your Course. You can only add CoursePoints in Garmin TrainingCenter and with a PCBasemap that isn’t an option. This is where the GoogleMaps based sites come to the fore, particularly WWW.BikeRouteToaster.com BRT does CoursePoints as well as trackpoints, you can set which side of the road an how far from the centre you ride. It auto routes you and automatically puts the right CoursePoint at a junction. Along with warning Coursepoints before the junction it is a great bit of software. Such as Time to Course, Distance to CoursePoint, ETA and so on. I’ve got nearly three years worth of rides and spinning classes from an Edge 305, Edge 705 and a Forerunner 50. You can overlay rides and compare all the data from the ride. It comes with a PCBasemap which is useless. Once you get a Garmin Map installed things become a lot better. You can save your ride History as a Course and use the Course point tool to add Coursepoints. This is the only way you can add Coursepoints with Garmin Software. Personally I wouldn’t bother it’s easier to use BikeRouteToaster to plan one. The file format used by Training Center is.TCX which is Edge specific. Along with Latitude and Longitude it contains heartrate and cadence data. Your digital mapping software probably won’t recognise this format yet but it will recognise a GPX file. You need to convert the TCX file to a GPX file with a conversion tool like TCXConverter. TCXConverter opens in a new window. Garmin Communicator enabling helps in the file transfer as the 705 is a file based device. I have about 120 Courses on Motionbased from 305 rides that I can’t transfer into my 705 unless I use a conversion program. After a fair bit of searching this seems the easiest at the moment. WWW.GPSies.com It allows conversion between the.crs format to the.tcx format which your 705 will see as a course in the Courses folder. It is an important jump, I hadn’t seen it as a problem as I tended not to reride a Course. If you get a Course (.crs) off an organiser it becomes a big problem trying to get it into a 705. Power and the lap button for a soft rest for a couple of seconds should see you back in business. Not so much a problem now but playing dead was an issue for early users. Can’t remember the pinch on a ride, big problem. A big problem if you’ve just bought your Edge as you think it’s broke, cue panic and irate calls to customer services. This clears your Profile and all your History. You can ride a Course at night and use CoursePoints to warn you of the turns. The Edge turns the backlight on when it gives a warning signal. This can be a Waypoint, CoursePoint, OffCourse or paused message. It’ll stay lit for the length of the backlight timer setting. If you want to see the screen at night pressing the power button once will bring the backlight to 50 as will the toggle button, sideways will not alter the screen your on. Please go into the following folder: Choose to keep the profile on the unit, and the problem may then be solved. You can upload your rides and runs to be stored online. Has a player module that plays the ride in Google maps that can be exported for others to see. Would be great if it included a Route or Course planning function. It doesn’t support the.TCX format will only import Waypoints and you can only save as a.GPX format. Fine if you have a 305 and want to plan a Route but a 305 doesn’t support a Garmin Map. You only need it if you have a version of a DVD map or want to rename a copy of the SD Card map as the PCBasemap so you can see it in Training Centre. The mapomatic ones include NCR cycleroutes but the link doesn’t work as I write this. Now Routable and with contours. This allows you to plan a ride as a Course but ride it like a Route. The advantage of this is that you get an unlimeted number of hardpoints which behave like a CoursePoints. There is also a Window with an Ordnance Survey map so planning from a Routsheet becomes a bit easier and you don’t have to purchase a digital map. Rides are Navigated as Saved ride as a 705 doesn’t support Routes. Auto plots CoursePoints and Warning points similar to WWW.BikeRouteToaster.Com I started out with my 305 using this site. Before you dismiss it, it still has it’s place but you need to know and understand the difference between a Route and a Course. It only supports GPX Routes. I recently asked about problems with the latest web update (v2.70) from Garmin. I have now found out from Garmin that they have found an error in the update and that it is corrupting some tcx.All you need to do, is open your Garmin folder, Then History and delete all the tcx. files. Alternatively, you can forward all the files to product support at Garmin and they will “clean” them and send them back. They also gave me a link to revert back to the old update. I do hope you dont mind me putting this on here, but i felt obliged after the help i have received from your goodself. Thanks, Nick Jordan WARNING clears all your data. I’ve had a lot of grief with 2.80 over the last day or so with the Edge not uploading files to TrainingCenter or GarminConnect. The root of the problem was that Version 2.70 or 2.80 deleted the History Folder and although the files were still in Edge memory they wouldn’t transfer across. You can find your location by going to Map mode and moving the toggle. Another way is to save a waypoint. Make sure you keep the rubber USB cover on as all sorts of nasties happen when water gets in. Likewise the microSD card cover and slot. Rain will get in eventually and this will wreck your ability to use an SD card map. Get it wet while out on a ride and you start to loose the map and your ride data. This isn’t funny on a 100mile ride never mind a wet one. Likewise if you have more than two HRM’s. At least you will be able to see what menu you need to be in. I thought I’d had a rough time of things with loosing my Etape training ride but Dave lost his actual Col climb data for his holiday in France. Trust me you’ll try anything to get that sort of data back, it’s priceless. Dave has rolled back to Ver 2.90 which is stable for him. I was lucky enough to have a hotel with WiFi but I’d be really gutted to loose any ride no matter what it was. If you confirm, you will have to re-enter all your settings. That’s it ! (I just did it without any problems) Thanks to Michael for the Garmin link. When saving the maps they said “When you go to transfer mapping, it will ask where you wish to save the mapping. Typically there will be a drop down list, here you will need to select the SD card instead of the Edge device” I did this and it worked so I replied “Many thanks for that, I now appear to have saved the maps to the SD card but can’t work out how to delete them from the Edge. I uploaded them from the device in Mapsource thinking it might remove them from the Edge but it didn’t. Any ideas?” Their response was prompt and said “If you connect the device to your computer and find it as a removable device, double click on the Garmin icon then double click on the Garmin folder. This is where you will find the mapping uploaded to the unit. The mapping file will be named GMAPSUPP.img. If you are going to delete the mapping, only delete that file. I have followed their instructions and it worked so I now have the maps I want on the SD card and the routes I saved are on the Edge. Hopefully this info will help others too. Cost was ?102 as it was well outside of the warranty. Served me very well all said and done. I’m new to “GPS” cycling. I’m west London based and do most of my cycling within say a 100 mile radius. I’m a road cyclist. I’m sure (hope) a lot of the technical info will make more sense with the device in front of me, however in terms of getting started what, in addition to the Garmin 705 pack (including HRM and cadence), am I initially going to need to budget for in terms of maps, SD cards etc to get this up and working for me. I gather the base map loaded on the device is probably inadequate and the MicroSD card looks the better solution for me. With no additional mapping it will route you on A roads and motorways. An SD card gets you up and running out of the box. A copy can be renamed as pcbasemap later so you see the map in TrainingCentre. I’m told that Garmin won’t pay to licence the best algorithm for this, but surely they can get closer to reality. Or am I missing something ? It counts calories going downhill which is a big negative and should be written out of the algorithm. You raise a valid point though so it’ll go into the knowledgebase. Frank. If they had their heads screwed on they would sponsor someone to come up with a garmin method. Plenty of Universites looking for a Master project. It’s not rocket science to negate the calories going downhill while not pedalling. Regards, Frank. I’ll put a link up in the Blogroll. If it’s valuable data save the ride history as a Course. If you can see the file in the History folders copy it to your Mac then export it to whatever program you like. I tried the file converter on GPSies. Also GPSVisulizer mentioned above. I’ll add a bit about data recovery on this page as it does happen, it happened to me on last Sundays ride my first 100 miler of this year when my Edge got wet. The tracks are labelled by date and time. When you press Start it begins a to log the track in a new file. When you press Stop it stops tracking. Each time you press the Lap button it places a Track marker in the file. When you Reset (hold the Lap button for several seconds) it closes the file. If you click on my name, you will get my page about using the Edge 605 (same as 705 for this purpose) with a Mac. I never use the Garmin utilities for handling routes because the web-based tools are so much better. George I am trying to do it at the moment and can’t work out how. Any advice would be appreciated. You copy the.img file across and rename it to whatever the PCBasemap is called. I’ll write it up for the Dummies guide. I didn’t want to be held responsable for someone making a mistake. I was almost there but I had created a new folder instead of replacing it. I can now actually see the road I live on! I have a second set of sensors, but I haven’t added them to the second bike or used the Edge on the second bike yet. I’d like to be able to use my HR monitor as well. Do I need to go into Garmine to distinguish between bike 1 and 2 when I download data.The lower half of the 705 contains the microSD card port and the mini USB port and the battery. The card slot is potted with a compound and can’t be replaced. Mine is faulty with the contacts corroded. I’ll be giving Garmin a call to see if the bottom half can be replaced but I don’t think it will be cheap. Works OK with a CD map or OSM map in the memory. It also started to auto stop and start mid ride when it got a soaking the other week. I’d be looking at sealing the slot with tape in future. I can’t seem to work out how you see the maps in training centre. Can you only do this after you install the maps on the GPS device itself? The basemap in your Garmin and Mapsource and Training centre is woeful. Have a look at other peoples rides in GarminConnect for an idea of what it looks like. DVD versions of the maps are locked to your device with a key so you can’t upload the maps and resell the DVD. Live data from each rider will be streamed by radio to a following car that will then stream the data to the webserver. Im hoping that the 705 is a good candidate to collect the rider data and. Do you know is it possible to stream the data the 705 collects out of the 705 to a radio on each bike? Cheers. You’d have to have whatever system the Teams use to stream rider data. It won’t come cheap. For logging it’s a great device. Sounds like a great app for an Iphone or smartphone though. I haven’t had a problem switching between bikes and sensors doing this Thanks, Frank. I can’t work it out at all. Lionel (of the Northend) gets a hell of a lot of stick but did mention a fix. Vario-focal lenses on your eyeware. This will allow you to glance down and see a focused screen. As such it’s not really a Garmin problem, but a problem with eyesite and cycling generally. God knows what the dissapointment rate is if you buy this device online and can’t see the screen clearly when your on your bike.