I see many people were raising this topic but all thread for u known reason were locked.
I see many people were raising this topic but all thread for u known reason were locked.
Excuse me, I'm not asking to add some expensive training algorithms or features to a cheaper model, but a support of one more but important bike sensor along with already supported by this model (https://www8.garmin.com/manuals/webhelp/GUID-E67DE53E-5B08-4903-9767-F58973BC1829/EN-US/GUID-09801A97-361B-4675-AD3A-6ACE25854DB3.html). Do you think it would be a big effort from experienced manufacturer?
As DCRainmaker said in 2022 "Yes, electronic shifting support is a significant feature Garmin has left out in Explore series. Sadly. Otherwise I would consider Explore 2."
I totally agree Garmin created this environment so we as users help each other out .
This cult is starting to leave a bad taste .
I can understand Garmin...1+1=0, this gps is design more and less for people make bike packing, bike touring and vagabonds without destiny Now I ask: how may percent of this type of users having bike with eletrônic shifting? Another question: If I have money to buy a bike with electronic shifting...almost sure I have money to buy a more expensive gps unit.
At the final of the day this is a business for Garmin and a hobby for you.
Vagabonds should use Garmin Etrex.
If I have money for a bike with electric shifting (that is already expensive by the way) I don't need all this training bells & whistles, but just a _bigscreen_ navigation that can guide me in my 50 km bike trips - why do I need to by 1040/1050 ? At the same time Explore 2 has support for power meter, heart rate, E-Bike, Group Track, Smart Trainer, VIRB Remote etc. And my question remains the same - why electronic shifter support was not added to this list?
Customers are making Garmin's business lucrative right now, but that could change if a better option comes along. Competitors are popping up like mushrooms after rain, and it reminds me of how Nokia was once unbeatable. If people start switching to these competitors, Garmin might end up ignoring the feedback from those leaving, which could hurt them in the long run.