I have a GPS bike computer

utcc.utoronto.ca

25 points by speckx 4 days ago


hackingonempty - 3 hours ago

Paper sheets are also lightweight and can be used all day without needing to be charged or putting any additional drain on your computer battery. So they are still used by some ultra endurance racers who need info as they ride like distance/elevation to next town, what stores or lodges will be open and their phone numbers.

A guy showing off his sheets as he makes his way to third place in the 2023 Tour Divide: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azJS106xeNA&t=1482s

AriedK - 3 hours ago

Here in the Netherlands we’ve got ‘fietsknooppunten’. Numbered junctions with proper bike paths linking them up, and clear signage pointing you to your next number. https://www.fietsknoop.nl/planner Just remembering, or writing down a couple of numbers gets you a long way. As a backup I have OsmAndMaps for pre-loading gpx files to my phone.

prmoustache - 3 hours ago

I am in team no screen on my bike. I spend way enough time in front of a screen, I don't mind missing a turn and getting lost once in a while. It is not like I am living in extreme wilderness and I still have a smartphone as a backup with loaded maps in case I have any doubt.

Eric_WVGG - 2 hours ago

This is sort of a pipe dream, but imagine taking an Android smartwatch, disassembling the chassis, adding a larger battery, and embedding it in a threadless headset cap.

GPS tracking, maps in a 1.5" screen, bluetooth reports of speed/cadence from one of those little spoke dealies.

WastedCucumber - 4 hours ago

I'm planning to go cross country sometime soon and still considering whether to get a bike computer or not. Knowing myself, I'll probably just stick to using physical maps. In my experience using them bakcpacking, I feel more immersed in my surroundings because I check them and the map at the same time, wondering when the next mountain will appear, if the river already took the bend I see on the map, etc. It just feels right, and I'm never in a hurry when hiking or riding anyway.

Plus I think I'm scared to crashing while looking down at GPS, and I think usijg maps would always force me to stop.

elchief - an hour ago

can anyone recommend a cheap but good bike computer with turn-by-turn nav? (for mountain biking)

unglaublich - 3 hours ago

Sure, cue sheets are cool from a cartography perspective, but they were mainly something engineered to achieve exactly what a gps route computer is doing:

  - Show where you should go
  - Show when you missed, and how you get back on the route
  - Change the route mid-trip (how often roads are closed)
All in all, sure they are a cool technology, but like a steam engine, it's mainly a thing to admire while moving on to more modern technology.
peterldowns - 4 hours ago

Would be nice to see an example of one of these cue sheets, I'm curious about the layout.

phoronixrly - 2 hours ago

I like to focus on riding not navigation when I'm out on my bike. When you have to go through 150-200km in a day, having to get your bearings on each country road fork gets tedious quite quickly.

It also helps you judge corners when you're descending on unknown roads.

I shudder at the thought of having to stop and juggle around paper cue sheets/a map...