Rene:

Glad this is working for you. I’m an early-adopted-tech-geek through and 
through, but I must admit this particular product exceeds even my desire to 
load my bike down with electronics. 

I get that you ride with “headphones”—I do this myself, but I would never use 
in-ear phones that block all outside noise *or* listen to music at a volume 
that blocks out all exterior sounds. You decide how you want to ride, but I 
think it’s dangerous to be out on the road without one of your most important 
senses (hearing) working properly. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had to 
take evasive action on the bike trail as the result of other riders (and 
runners) who can’t hear anything buy their music.

Regarding electric vehicles—even here in California, they’re a very small part 
of the fleet, and in my experience that share drops even farther on low-volume 
country roads (except for perhaps Marin County, where the local residents drive 
their Teslas out into the country a bit more than in, say, Kern County). 

My solution for knowing what’s happening behind me is to use my ears and a 
helmet-mounted mirror. Cheap, effective, and neither one needs to be recharged.

--Eric N
campyonly...@me.com
www.CampyOnly.com
Campyonlyguy.blogspot.com
@Campyonlyguy


> On Mar 1, 2016, at 9:00 AM, René Sterental <orthie...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> I am a geek, and love technology applied to my hobbies. Yes, there is a place 
> for simplicity but so far it's not near me. I love my Apple Watch and iPhone 
> 6 Plus, but after trying to use them as cycling computers with a very poor 
> overall experience, I went back to my Garmin Edge 1000. I used Polar 
> technology a decade and a half ago, but when Garmin entered the cycling 
> market, it provided a better user experience for me, so I switched. I'm still 
> upset that Garmin doesn't share data with Apple Health, but it's not enough 
> to make me switch to the poorer user experience I had with Cyclemeter even 
> factoring the Apple Watch app.
> 
> It's not that I am obsessed with tracking all these numbers, I just like 
> watching the data when I ride, and being able to go back and compare progress 
> every now and then, see my tracks on the maps, etc. 
> 
> A couple of weeks ago I was at Palo Alto Bicycles looking for a helmet light, 
> and I "discovered" a new Garmin gadget called Varia 
> (https://buy.garmin.com/en-US/US/into-sports/cycling/varia-rearview-radar/prod518151.html
>  
> <https://buy.garmin.com/en-US/US/into-sports/cycling/varia-rearview-radar/prod518151.html>).
>  For some reason, I had never seen it, heard of it and was curious to see 
> what it was. When I discovered it was a rear-looking radar to let you know 
> when cars were approaching from the back, I was intrigued and did a bit of 
> research online and then ordered one.
> 
> I installed it on Sunday, and have ridden with it yesterday and today. I 
> think it's very helpful and useful, particularly, when you are riding on 
> roads with low traffic volume. If there are a lot of cars, then there is no 
> purpose to it, but its use is very good when you are riding on low traffic 
> roads as it lights up and tells you when and how a car is approaching from 
> the back. My commute is mostly on such roads and trails, and now I don't have 
> to keep turning my head back when approaching sections when I have to take 
> the lane just to see if there is someone behind me. Particularly useful with 
> all these electric vehicles in California that don't make a sound when they 
> approach you.
> 
> It connects to the Garmin Edge unit, so I don't need the version with the 
> separate display unit. With the front load configuration I have it attached 
> to the seat post with the mount provided, but for the Homer I'll devise a way 
> to attach it to the saddlebag. It provides an additional dynamic tailight 
> that lights dynamically as the cars approach you.
> 
> Since I'll confess to the sin of riding while listening to music on my 
> headphones, the benefit is significantly higher for me as I don't always hear 
> the cars when they are far behind me. The angle of coverage is pretty wide, 
> so on multi-lane roads or when riding on a trail next to a road, it will 
> still light up when cars are behind you even if they are one or two lanes 
> away. It still makes you aware. On my evening commute yesterday, I used it to 
> enhance my timing to switch lanes in traffic so I could take a left turn. 
> Worked very well!
> 
> The only hassle is that you have to charge it, and I still haven't tried to 
> see how long will the battery truly last. Although at NAHBS I saw these 
> chargers you can piggy-back on the SON hub so you can charge your devices as 
> you ride... Will be doing some research on those as well, although they'd 
> only be truly practical if I ever go on a tour.
> 
> Viva the geek!
> 
> René 
> 
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