First ride with my new VIRB Elite

My VIRB Elite arrived yesterday from Amazon, so I mounted it on my MTB and took it with me today to record the ride. I encountered a few problems along the way. At about 15 minutes in, I dropped off the pavement onto a gravel road, a drop of about 3 inches on my full suspension Cannondale Rush. The VIRB didn't seem to like the impact, and restarted. (As I found out later, it lost the first 15 minutes of video.) I started the first climb, then eventually reached the top and started descending. The road vibration from the gravel road naturally picked up as my speed increased. A little ways into the descent I noticed that the viewfinder was frozen and the record light wasn't blinking. I stopped and held down the power button until the VIRB restarted. (Later I found that the VIRB had lost the GPS data for this segment, although the video was still there.) From here until the end of the ride, the VIRB behaved itself. I stopped a couple of times at overlooks to remove the VIRB from the mount (easy with gloves on) and shoot some stills while the video was still running (pretty cool). The stills came out fine, although with the overcast skies and the leaves all down, there wasn't much point to actually taking them.

So when I got home, I started VIRB Edit on my Mac Pro and connected the VIRB. That's when I found out about the missing first 15 minutes of video, and the missing GPS data for the next 24 minutes (the VIRB stores videos into 24 minute, 4 Gb chunks, so for my 1:42 ride with 15 minutes lost, I had 4 clips). After VIRB Edit retrieved the clips from the VIRB, it offered to let me add GPS data to the first clip. I used the .fit from my Edge 800 to do that, but that exposed another problem. The synchronization done in VIRB Edit is about 15 minutes off, so it was showing the heart rate, altitude, and speed (and the position on the map) for about 15 minutes before the actual video. (The VIRB itself doesn't seem to know about daylight time; at the moment it's showing 2:14 when the actual time is 1:14 EST). Of course, that's only a problem for that one 24 minute clip where the VIRB froze and lost the GPS data for that segment. The remaining clips use the VIRB's own GPS data, and so is accurate. On the other hand, the VIRB doesn't seem to have actually connected to my HRM (Garmin hard HRM belt) and maybe not my Tempe, even though I asked it to. The HRM was working (the Edge 800 saw it the whole time). Don't know about the Tempe, since the 800 can't show it and I left my Fenix at home. The video is displaying G, speed, and altitude, but not HR or temperature.

So. Minuses: the VIRB glitched twice and lost data, both video and GPS. Not good. VIRB Edit didn't synchronize the video and GPS data from my Edge 800 properly. Pluses: the mount was easy to use with gloved hands. Video quality is good, although stabilization doesn't seem to work very well on high speed (25 - 30 mph) descents on gravel roads. The ability to take stills while recording video is a big plus, although the stills are small (in 16x9 12 M pixel mode) compared to my Pentax Optio, which I usually carry.
  • Were you able to export video from Virb edit and if so, what version of the OS are you running?
  • Were you able to export video from Virb edit and if so, what version of the OS are you running?


    I'm doing that right now. I'm exporting a 720p file. It seems to be working (about 7/8 done), but it hasn't finished yet. I'm running 10.9 (Mavericks) on a 2010 2x2.4 GHz quad core Xeon Mac Pro.
  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 11 years ago
    Great post - I have thought about it. I have the 705 and fenix, hrm and the tempe. Keep us posted if it was a glitch because if Garmin has these working, it would be enticing.

    Sorry your first run was challenging. Hopefully it is not indicative of what we should expect of the VIRB.

    Thanks!
  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 11 years ago
    My Virb Elite also had it's maiden voyage today.

    My experience was similar to Schinder's, except I didn't realize that the Virb had stopped recording until after the ride, so I only was able to record 23:56 of the ride. All the telemetry and GPS data was lost... When I returned home, I spoke with Garmin tech support was told to do a "hard" reset.


    Other challenges:

    1) Unable to pair cadence sensor (Bongrager Duo-tap)
    2) When I configured the Virb, the clock was an hour off, and was "magically" fixed by the first morning
    3) Unit completely locked up while hand carrying it for a back-yard test. The only way to get the unit respond was to remove battery.

    I am also trying to find a way to display power data from the iBike Newton...
  • I did not have any lockups or unit losing data, but I need to re-try pairing my temperature probe as it did not show up in the data. I was using the "record" switch to turn the unit on/off during my ride, and all 4 clips were were captured with data. On a different note---I find the verb edit software produces many more artifacts than i-movie--working on getting the test videos up on vimeo now.
  • I did not have any lockups or unit losing data, but I need to re-try pairing my temperature probe as it did not show up in the data. I was using the "record" switch to turn the unit on/off during my ride, and all 4 clips were were captured with data. On a different note---I find the verb edit software produces many more artifacts than i-movie--working on getting the test videos up on vimeo now.


    Yesterday I moved my VIRB to be near my Camelbak with my Tempe attached, switched to Dashboard mode, and verified that the VIRB could read from the Tempe. But there's no temperature or heart rate data in the .fit or the .gpx of the 12 miles out of 19 that the VIRB recorded. So maybe the problem is that the VIRB isn't recording properly. Heart rate, temperature, and distance are all "INVALID" in the .fit; only position and altitude and speed are correct. The timestamps also seem to be right for EST, even though the unit is displaying EDT on its screen. There's no mention in the .gpx (lots of acceleration information in the GPX, but no heart rate or temperature).
  • My Virb Elite also had it's maiden voyage today.

    My experience was similar to Schinder's, except I didn't realize that the Virb had stopped recording until after the ride, so I only was able to record 23:56 of the ride. All the telemetry and GPS data was lost... When I returned home, I spoke with Garmin tech support was told to do a "hard" reset.


    Yes, I may have been misled by the first descent and the vibrations associated with it. The first clip is 23:56 long, and the VIRB froze then. Maybe the problem isn't the VIRB reacting to vibrations, but that it screws up the move from a finished clip to a new one. (I assume they have to do that because they're using an ancient MS-DOS file system?) The following two transitions worked seamlessly (I had 4 clips in all), though, so it must not be something that happens every time.
  • Today the second test, this time a road ride, both because I rode the mountain bike yesterday and because I have a GSC-10 on both of my road bikes, and I wanted to see if it would work with the VIRB. So I attached the VIRB to my touring bike, started it and the Edge 800, and set off. This time I was wearing my non-prescription glasses with stick-on bifocals, so I could actually see the detail on the small screen of the VIRB. First, I can confirm that the VIRB Elite does not link to ANT+ sensors properly. I periodically checked and it didn't see either my HRM or my GSC-10 the entire ride. Yesterday's brief connection to the Tempe well after the ride must have been a fluke. There were spontaneous restarts at about 6 minutes and 39 minutes into the 1:34 ride. The only GPS track saved starts at 39 minutes in, so it lost the first part of the track. VIRB Edit is still importing the clips, so I don't know how much video I lost, but there are two zero size .MP4's on the VIRB, so I must have lost some. The last 55 minutes went OK, and it saved the track for that part of the ride, but no HR or cadence in the track, of course.

    So I'm glad that the VIRB Elite isn't something I was planning on using every day like I do with the Edge 800, since as yet it's not reliable. I might take it hiking next week just to use the head mount and make sure that my Fenix can turn it on and off. Otherwise, it'll stay on the shelf until an upgrade or two comes out. Good thing this isn't the time of year when I'd like to use it (missed fall by a month, and the snow isn't here yet).
  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 11 years ago
    Voyage #2, mountain bike. 720p, 60 frames/second. The Virb worked as expected. It captured all the telemetry (HR, Altitude, etc, no cadence on the MTB). I took pictures while riding, they came out clear. Other than my inadvertently turning off the recording (which ended the second clip), the 1st clip 23:56 ended and the second clip began without any problem. My ride ended before the 3rd clip would have started the next loop. The stabilization didn't seem to work well, and the images weren't smooth

    MTB ride 3 scheduled Sunday. I will revert to 1080p 30 frames/second.

    I believe there is a tremendous amount of learning to be done with both the device settings and the software... Let's hope Garmin continues to be up to the task to train us in becoming experts!
  • I think your micro sd ist formatted to fat32, so the virb has to create after 23:45/4GB a new file.;)

    What about the battery life? Anyone reached up to 3 hours?