- Joined
- Sep 17, 2013
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I have burned out 3 handlebar mounted cyclometers with the magnetic sensor. They don't last long and tell you a lot of data I don't want so I finally bought my first cell phone. I don't know the number, who cares, if I want to know it I can call someone and they can tell me. My voice mail message is "don't leave a message caus I don't answer them". I bought it so I could tell how far I rode my bicycle. I got tired of driving my car on my routs to get the miles or asking someone in our riding group how far their app said we rode (every phone has a different answer). So after 3 frustrating hours where I tried and failed to get my new cell phone to load a riding app I turned it over to my son in law and he got Map My Ride installed in 20 minutes. Oh boy I thought. Ha! I took it to the Wednesday night ride and after four failed attempts to get Map My Ride to open I quit and rode without the dang phone. Of course when I returned from the ride it opened right away. Tonight on the Thursday night ride I got it to work but it said that my average speed was 1342.7 miles an hour. How can you believe any of the info these things are giving you? Calories burned is a joke, scientific tests prove they are way wrong. Why can't they make a simple electronic cyclometer app that just tells you how far you rode, not a bunch of flashing screens that tell you a bunch of stuff that is wrong and that I don't want to know? The best cyclometer I ever owned was a 1960s Lucas Cyclometer. Why can't they make an app that is as simple to use, load and as reliable as the Lucas? They throw in a bunch of junk screens because they can and to get more info than the competition. Way too complex. The only people who need to know their cadence, heart rate, climb, calories, split time, distance and a bunch of other data are pros and they have a team that tells them their status. The average Joe is enamored by all this junk info, I just want to know how far I rode. Too bad the Lucas Cyclometer is extinct. Ebay has them but they are no good for single track. It seems my new cell phone is a piece of high tech unreliable junk. From now on I will just make up in my head my riding distances, probably more accurate than my phone.