For a number of years Garmin would launch an annual replace to its do-everything Fenix line and in addition to its Epix line which was, successfully, only a Fenix with an AMOLED display. Nicely Garmin lastly determined to consolidate and the Fenix is now the one line to rule all of them. And I imply that, as a result of it is extremely actually the very best watch I’ve ever worn, but it surely comes with a hefty price ticket. Not solely are you able to now select between a brilliant and colourful AMOLED display or a solar-charging show with mind-boggling battery life, however there are some new options that make the newest Fenix much more versatile.
For starters, the Fenix 8 has cribbed the depth sensor from its Descent line, which suggests this on a regular basis watch now works as a full-on dive pc from leisure scuba in addition to freediving. The watch additionally now includes a microphone and a speaker. This lets you make some fundamental voice instructions (begin an exercise, change modes, set a timer, open stopwatch, and many others), report voice notes, and even reply a cellphone name which I used a few occasions whereas I used to be showering (notice: nonetheless no mobile connectivity, although, which is a bummer). It additionally has a built-in LED flashlight (three ranges of white and one purple for sustaining night time imaginative and prescient) which I ended up utilizing on a regular basis. It additionally has built-in topographic maps, 24/7 well being monitoring, 15+ day battery life, and monitoring for over 100 totally different actions.
The Fenix 8 is available in 43mm, 47mm, and 51mm sizes and is out there in each AMOLED and Photo voltaic display choices. Personally, I feel AMOLED is the way in which to go as a result of it seems to be so good and charging it as soon as each two weeks isn’t a giant deal, however for those who’re going to be performing some month-long treks within the hinterlands, the 51mm Photo voltaic version begins with a full month of battery life (as much as 48 days with common publicity to the solar). It’s costly, but it surely’s implausible.—Brent Rose
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