Garmin 010-00658-10 Forerunner 405 with ANT+ Sport Wireless Technology (Black) | 
enlarge | Brand: Garmin Category: CE
List Price: $318.95 Buy New: $274.99 You Save: $43.96 (14%)
New (9) Used (3) Refurbished (2) from $230.00
Rating: 53 reviews Sales Rank: 2465
Format: CD Platforms: Windows XP Professional, Windows XP Home Edition, Windows 2000 Color: black Media: Electronics Memorabilia: No Batteries Included: No Operating System: Windows XP Home Edition Native Resolution: 124 x 95 Display Size: 1.06 Includes MP3 Player: 0 Size: One Size Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 6.4 x 6.4 x 3.3 Legal Disclaimer: Disclaimer: This Heart Rate Monitor Watch is not a medical device, or intended for use in any medical, or patient monitoring application. This Heart Rate Monitor Watch is not intended of use in any commercial application. Always consult a physician before starting any physical activity.
MPN: 010-00658-10 Model: 010-00658-10 UPC: 753759075309 EAN: 0753759075309 ASIN: B0011UIXNE
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Water-resistant black GPS-enabled sports watch | | • | Can be Used for Running and Cycling/Outdoors or Indoors w/Optional Sensor | | • | Training and Motivational Features: Virtual Partner, Courses, Workouts, Goals | | • | GPS Features Mark Waypoints / Back to Start | | • | 1.88" x 2.78" x 0.646", 2.11 oz |
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Product Description Fire your personal trainer and strap on the Garmin Forerunner 405 GPS Watch. This easy-to-use training tool uses GPS satellites for full monitoring and analysis of your workouts, as well as the ability to download wirelessly to your computer. The 405 continuously monitors your time, distance, pace and calories, and stores each of your workouts so you can track your improvement. The GPS functions allow you to store 100 different waypoints in addition to tracking your speed and distance. Race against Garmins Virtual Partner to keep yourself in check, and transfer your data wirelessly to your computer after your workout. The wireless function also lets you share workouts, locations, and courses with a friends 405. Garmins touch bezel eliminates the need for different buttons, so you can focus on your workout instead of fumbling with your watch.
Product Features- Material: Plastic, rubber
- Dimensions: 1.88 x 2.78 x .65in (4.8 x 7.1 x 1.6cm)
- Antenna: Internal
- Routes: 0
- Waypoints: 100
- Mapping: No
- Digital Compass: No
- Computer Compatible:
- Waterproof: No, water resistant
- Battery Type: Rechargeable lilthium ion
- Battery Life: [Power Save Mode] 2 weeks; [ Training Mode] 8hrs
- Expansion Card: No
- Weight: 2.1oz (60g)
- Recommended Use: Training, running
- Manufacturer Warranty:
- Country of Origin: China
Amazon.com Product Description With the Forerunner 405, Garmin has finally put thepower of GPS location-based date into a sleek sport watch that can be worn all day. Runners no longer have to choose between function and fashion. Garmin's ANT + Sport wireless platform that wirelessly sends your data to your computer and a touch bezel that lets you change screens with a simple tap (no more fumbling for buttons) run make this not just a leap forward in GPS-enabled fitness devices, but in training devices period. Forerunner 405 comes in two color options black or green. The Power Of Location-Based Data Anyone who has used Garmin's Forerunner 205 or 305 already understands the power that attaching location data to traditional measurements like distance, speed, time, calories burned, and heart rate can provide. Knowing exactly where you worked hardest, ran fastest (or most slowly), and lets you tailor your workouts to improve for specific distances, conditions, and types of terrain. It gives a complete picture of how you interact with every portion of your run.  Forerunner 405 comes in two color options black or green |  Train with a virtual partner | Watch Results Loaded with serious training features, Forerunner 405 continuously monitors your time, distance, pace, calories and heart rate (when paired with heart rate monitor). Each run is stored in memory so you can review and analyze the data to see how you've improved. The high-sensitivity GPS receiver sustains satellite reception, whether you're tackling a trail or jogging through the urban canyons of skyscrapers. The Forerunner 405 is water-resistant (IPX7) and can be used outdoors or indoors (with an optional foot pod), making it the ultimate year-round, all-weather training tool. Forerunner 405 is available with or without a heart rate monitor (see the versions tab) to help you make the most out of your training. Versions with a digital heart rate monitor continuously track heart beats per minute. Train in a certain heart rate zone to improve your fitness level or compare your pace and heart rate to past performance on the same run. The revolutionary patent-pending touch bezel on the face of the watch makes navigating the options easier than ever. Simply by tapping, holding or running a finger along the bezel, runners can begin a new workout, access their training history or challenge a Virtual Partner. The Forerunner 405 makes training with a Virtual Partner easy and efficient. Runners can adjust the Virtual Partner's pace without stopping in the middle of a workout, and the Virtual Partner is always on and ready for a challenge. Run, Sync, Store and Share One of Garmin's most ambitious decisions has been to approach fitness devices as a total platform with their "ANT + Sport" connectivity system. All of Garmin's new fitness devices, including the Forerunner 405, Edge 605 and 705 bike computers, and Forerunner 50 heart rate monitor watches, will interface wirelessly with any devices that are compatible wiht the "ANT + Sport" protocol, including devices from other manufacturers. Once you've logged the miles, the ANT+Sport wireless technology automatically transfers data to your computer when the Forerunner is in range. No cables, no hookups. The data's just there, ready for you to analyze, categorize and share through Garmin's online community, Garmin Connect or optional Garmin Training Center software. You can wirelessly send workouts from your computer to Forerunner, too. Share Wirelessly With Forerunner 405 you can share your locations, advanced workouts and courses wirelessly with other Forerunner 405 users. Now you can send your favorite workout to your buddy to try, or compete against a friend's recorded course. Sharing data is easy. Just select "transfer" to send your information to nearby units. Cross-Train Take your training inside with the versatile Forerunner 405. Pair it with an optional foot pod to track your speed, distance and running cadence indoors when a GPS signal is unavailable. This new design clips onto your laces for easy removal and automatically turns on when you start moving. You can also add a speed/cadence bike sensor to track the speed and distance of your cycling workouts. Be Part of A Community In 2007, Garmin acquired Motion-based, the largest shared repository of customer-generated gps-based routes, courses and maps. This was a significant move for Garmin to support the gps user community and bring a wealth of route options to gps users. With a simple connection to your computer, you can join a worldwide network of cyclists and outdoor enthusiasts through Garmin Connect our new, one-stop site for data analysis an sharing. You can also upload to optional Garmin Training Center software for further analysis. Garmin Training Center stores large quanities of workout and ride data. Some of the things you can do are - Review your workout data, including pace/speed, distance, time, calories burned; and if available, heart rate, cadence and detailed elevation.
- View a detailed graph of your workout data, plotted over time or distance.
- View a map of your workout that shows the exact path you traveled.
- Categorize your workout history according to type of activity.
- Review previous workouts, which are saved by day and week.
- Create customized workouts with specific goals and rest intervals. Then send them to your fitness device.*
- Schedule workouts for a specific day with calendar.
- Get custom workout templates designed by the experts at TrainingPeaks.com
What's In The Box Forerunner 405, USB ANT stick, AC adapter, Charging clip, Owner's manual, Quick reference guide
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 53
garmin 405 March 7, 2010 Guy M Sugino (WAILUKU, HI, US) Easy to use, ability to adjust data fields and customize to your preference.
Very accurate. downloading data with ANT stick to view inofrmation on workouts at Garmin website very helpful.
Less control February 22, 2010 E. Rensi (Davis, CA) I bought the Forerunner in late February 2010 and installed the current software and firmware. For the last 6 months I used the 205. There are a lot of reviews written for the Forerunner 405 already, so first a few things I noticed that I haven't seen mentioned elsewhere, and if you already have a 205 or 305 you might be interested to know:
(1) The 405 no longer has the "other" sport mode. Now it's just running and biking modes. There's no fast way to switch between sports like there was on the older models. Switching sports requires navigating through a few levels of menu.
(2) The 205 (and 305) had two display screen pages, and a third page dedicated to the sport mode for each of the running, biking, and "other" sport, and that screen would only be accessible if the watch was in that mode. This was useful for example if you wanted to see speed units in bike mode and pace units in running mode. Now, there are three non sport-specific pages, each of which is available in any sport mode, or disabled. That way, you can have a page with speed units and another page with pace units, but both pages are always there for both modes unless you turn one of them off. This makes things a little less convenient.
(3) The 405 cannot be operated while connected to the charger. Battery power only. Probably not an issue for most people but I suppose someone might want to have the option to have the watch run on external power in a lab setting or maybe a long bike ride using solar power or something. Not with the 405.
(4) There is no user setting to control how the device distributes waypoints, and the way 405 does it is mysterious.
(5) upper and lower pace/speed limits are not available on the fly. This functionality is now only available with pre-programmed (advanced) workouts.
(6) The ANT+ interface is a little bit slower and less user-controllable. Transfers happen automatically and in a background process on your computer called the ANT+ agent. (new) data is downloaded from the watch on to the agent and held there, from where it can be accessed by a third party like Garmin Training Center, Sport tracks, etc. If for some reason the transfer fails (like you walk out of the room while it's happening), you have the option to force a re-send via a menu on the watch. If you want to send data to the watch such as workouts, courses etc, whatever software you use sends it to the ANT+ agent, where its held in a queue until the next time the watch is nearby to receive it. This stuff simpler in theory but it requires more things to work correctly and you have very little control over what's happening except to plug or unplug the ANT+ dongle.
I did a 17 mile run yesterday with both the 205 and the 405 on my wrists. The 405 initially locked on to the GPS satellites significantly faster but once the connection is established the reception doesn't seem that much different. The route I ran included several tunnels that go under the street. When going through these tunnels, the 205 tends to lose signal and register crazy instantaneous paces like 3/mile. This can be annoying if you have it set to keep you in a certain pace zone, and it starts beeping at you to slow down. The 405 also lost signal just about as often, but in different tunnels! But overall, the 405 is more reasonable about it and doesn't give weird readings when it loses signal. Both watches gave the same distance within 0.1 mile, so no complaint there.
I don't see the problem with the bezel that a lot of people complain about. It works fine. Sliding your finger on the bezel is only used for scrolling through menus, so unless you're programming your watch while running it's not an issue. Otherwise, you tap on the bezel to switch display pages or turn on the backlight, or tap and hold to change modes. Even in the highest sensitivity setting, you'd really have to put your finger on the bezel and hold it there deliberately to enter a menu and do anything drastic. Starting and stopping the timer is done with the side buttons. I don't even see a need to lock the bezel.
This is a great watch, don't listen to the haters February 6, 2010 J. W. Peterson 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I just wanted to add a positive review to help out anyone still wondering about purchasing this watch and still on the fence due to the numerous bad reviews it has received. The watch works great, fits great, and looks normal enough that I can wear it to work and other places when I'm not running. If you're worried about the reports of the bezel not operating when the watch is wet, I'd say don't worry about it: you can start and stop the watch with the top button and that's pretty much all you need to do while you're running. I lock the bezel 99% of the time, including while I'm running, to prevent accidental taps from changing the mode. It's as simple as that. If you find yourself needing to tap and swipe the bezel to get more information than current time, distance, and pace *while* you're running, maybe it's time to concentrate more on running and less on the gadgets you are using to help you run!
Garmin Forerunner 405 December 30, 2009 brysgrl (California) I bought this for my boyfriend for his birthday as an update to the older one that he had. He has had a harder time adjusting to this than I thought he would. The dial is a touch bezel and it seems more complicated to work than his old one. He hasn't said it, but I think he actually liked the older one better.
Great features but don't sweat December 27, 2009 vince (california) I've had the same problems with this watch as many other users. It's awesome until you start to sweat. I typically don't need to touch the bezel during a run but for some reason the screen will occationally change to the menu. It usually happens well into my run once my arms get sweaty. It might also change to the satellite screen if I run in a dense forest. Then I'm stuck because my hands are sweaty and my clothes are damp with sweat so the bezel becomes useless. Since I can't switch modes using the bezel, I can't turn off the timer or use the lap function. A few times after I've finished a run and the area under the watch was soaked with sweat, the watch acted as though it was possessed. It started beeping repeatedly, the light turned on and off, and it started scrolling through modes randomly. It all stopped when I took off the watch and dried it. I've also had several instances where the battery charge seemed to make a difference. Once the battery gets under 25% I've found that the start/stop and lap buttons aren't very responsive. I've had several times where I had to just forget using the lap timer. When I can afford it I'll get the 305. It would be nice if Garmin stepped up to the plate and offered a trade-in price for those of us who are disappointed in this product since it's obvious that it doesn't perform well when a person sweats during a workout.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 53
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