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GARMIN 010-00467-00 Forerunner 305 GPS Receiver With Heart Rate Monitor

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 Location:  Home » GPS » Categories » GARMIN 010-00467-00 Forerunner 305 GPS Receiver With Heart Rate MonitorOctober 11, 2008  
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GARMIN 010-00467-00 Forerunner 305 GPS Receiver With Heart Rate Monitor
GARMIN 010-00467-00 Forerunner 305 GPS Receiver With Heart Rate Monitor

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Brand: Garmin
Category: CE

List Price: $299.99
Buy New: $195.00
You Save: $104.99 (35%)



New (63) Used (2) Refurbished (2)

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 561 reviews
Sales Rank: 64

Media: Electronics
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Batteries Included: Yes
Native Resolution: 160x100
Display Size: 1.3
Includes MP3 Player: 0
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2
Dimensions (in): 8 x 10 x 6
Array: 
Warranty: 1 year warranty

MPN: 010-00467-00
Model: 010-00467-00
UPC: 753759051945
EAN: 0753759051945
ASIN: B000CSWCQA

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 16-20 of 561
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4 out of 5 stars GPS on the run   September 18, 2008
Works great, downtown between buildings or in the woods. When you fire it up it may take a few minutes to acquire the signal but besides that always fun to know your exact pace. It helped me stay on pace to qualify for Boston. Watch size may appear bulky but it is light.


5 out of 5 stars Works great!   September 15, 2008
I ran with a Forerunner 201 for a few years when the power button seemed to go out on it. I decided to go with the 305 to get the HRM and experiment with that for training. The 305 works just as advertised. It obtains the satellites faster and holds the signal better. I run a lot of trails under tree cover and the 201 would invariably give me weak signal alerts. I don't think I've gotten such an alert with the 305 in the few weeks I've had it.

The Garmin workout software is not bad, but I'm able to directly import data from the 305 to SportsTrack, which is great. Makes analyzing the routes and comparing runs across days very easy.

I'm very pleased with the unit...especially at the price on Amazon!



4 out of 5 stars Great out of the box with advanced features I keep learning about   September 15, 2008
I'm new to running and find this sport watch very helpful. The heart monitor is also a plus, even after running to check out how I did during my runs.
Though it is sometimes a bit slow to locate satellites, I use that time to be sure I've stretched enough before starting out.
I especially like the auto pause, since some of my runs force me to cross streets and I don't have to try and recalculate my pace based on time I stopped for a light to turn green.
Highly recommend it.



5 out of 5 stars excellant   September 14, 2008
easy to use. Tons of features and options. Easy to pair with foot pod or heart rate monitor. GPS reception is very good. I used it under very heavy tree cover with 100% acuracy.


3 out of 5 stars Loved it for months until it broke   September 12, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I have been a runner for years but have never bought into the gadgetry hype until this year. Until now, I have been content running sans music, headphones, stop watch, heart rate monitor, etc. For mileage I would just use online mapping tools. After winning a contest with the prize being an amazon.com gift certificate, I decided what the heck, and purchased the Garmin Forerunner 305.

It arrived in due course and having seen all the pictures online, I knew it wasnt going to be beautiful (like my Rolex- ha ha! just kidding on that). It looked very Star Trek-ish but I am not big on trying to look fashionable when I am running; I am too busy sweating to care. I have average sized wrists and this watch hurts a bit when I wear it. I have to use it on the hole that gives the tightest fit, or it will slip and slide around and hit my wrist bone painfully. But that wasnt a deal breaker.

The instructions said to power up outside and wait for it to locate satelites. I went outside, turned it on, and waited, and waited, and waited. I was in the middle of my apartment complex parking lot, no trees, no buildings blocking the sky. Also, at the time I was living in a prominent central NJ town and definitely not in a remote, off the beaten path area. Yet it took minutes to locate satelites.

But once it was on- it was on!!! I did a test run on a path that had mile markers and was really pleased that the Garmin marked those distances with accuracy! After my run, I played around it some more. Now I am a low tech type of girl, so I was content to set the watch to display the time elapsed, the time of day, and the average pace. Some people may claim the pace function is inaccurate but to me it's pretty relative, I dont need to know exactly how fast (or more likely, how slow) I am moving AT THAT SECOND. I'm content to know how my overall run went. My favorite features are the auto lap reset (I tell it to mark each mile and then I hvae a nice readout of my splits at the end) and the auto alarm feature. At first, I set the alarm to go off at a certain distance, at which I'd turn around and run back thus ensuring a cover the amount I set out to. Later, for training runs I did use the alarm feature for when my pace dropped below the limit I set- and believe me, it was annoying but also a good motivator to get my butt moving!

If you look at the photos, you will see the display is pretty large. I have no problems reading it more the most part. The two buttons under ths display are very touch responsive. however, the four buttons on the side are pretty tough to hit. I have to dig a fingernail into them to get them to respond. That's fine when I'm stationary but takes some effort when I am moving. And that sucks because in order to turn on the backlight, you must push the power on button. So basically when I did my runs in the pre-dawn darkness, I'd just give up and rely on the beeps of my watch instead.

I've mentioned I found the distance to be quite accurate. I ran a few road races with teh watch and each time, it was spot on. Granted, I was running pretty much in straight lines and in lightly wooded areas. As I'm about to explain, I think the Garmin is great UNTIL you go off road. More on that later.

The Garmin definitely brought out the OCD monster in me. With all this knowledge at my fingertips, suddenly I was keeping obsessive track of how far I ran, how fast, how long. The Garmin can plug into the usb port of your computer and downloads the info. Do NOT use the propriatary software included in teh box. It sucks. It is really basic and crappy. You are better off designing your own Excel spreadsheet; or, download a much better workout tracker. The software actually did something weird to my computer and kept running in the background even after I "closed" it (could see an icon in the system tray). However, I did not mind so much because it was the actual Garmin unit that I cared about.

And then. It happened. The Garmin broke.
Well, first what happened was I visited my parents in a more rural part of the country. The Garmin took a long, loong time to locate satelites (I think it had memorized my old NJ address) and then it said it couldnt locate any. The pace feature did nto work but the stop watch did. Fine, I thought. When I went back to NJ, it again took a loooooong time to locate satelites, and then it gave me the "cannot find" message, which I thought ???? I turned it off, turned it back on, and finally it found satelites. I also noted at that time the bleeps and blurps had grown distinctly fainter.

Then in the past month I moved, still within NJ, but now my neighborhood has lots of trees. O my first run, the Garmin could not locate any satelites. I ran anyway. The following days, it still couldnt find any satelites, and I noticed the progress bar it shows when it tries to find satellite signal was not even moving. So did it "teach" itself to give up trying to find my location? As noted before, the sound volume had also gotten really soft. And then it died. Completely and utterly. I had charged it just the night before so I wondered if I'd accidentally knocked it askew on the charging cradle (aquite possible as it is a very loose connector). Charged it up again that night, but the next day it still wouldn't turn on. I put it back on the charging cradle and saw the unit displayed "Charge complete" Eh? I pulled it off. No power. Put it back on the charger. Said it was "on" PUlled it off. Nothing. so basically I have a Garmin that runs on DC but not otherwise. That will do me little good when I am outside running.

That is pretty much how it stands right now. I hvae tried contacting customer service, and that is a big big BIGJOKE. The 1-800 number is just awful, and no matter what time I call, the wait is always 35-40 minutes. And I have yet to get a human on the line. I called the other number (has an area code) and this very sourly woman came on and promptly transferred me to the automated 1-800 number! I called again, got her again, and when I told her she'd transfered me to the damn "hotline" she hung up on me. Sigh. The other option Garmin tries to steer you towards is using the online product support but that's alo a joke. I dont get any replies until days later, and they're always from different people. I have started replying and in my replies I would quote from the email chain below the message. The tech support guy (always is a guy's name) would just write back some robotic message that clearly ignored every point I made in my original messages. For example, I would state I could not power on the unit when it is not on the cradle, and tech support would email me back telling me to "power on the unit." UGH.

So this is my rather longwinded report....I am glad I had my little few months of fun with the Garmin but it appaers the honeymoon period is over.



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