What does Garmin offer with its latest bike computer range?

By Paul Norman

Published: Monday, 15 May 2023 at 12:00 am


The latest updates to the Garmin cycling computer range are the Garmin Edge 540 and Edge 840.

The new bike computers join the Garmin Edge 1040 in providing Garmin’s latest functionality and the option of solar power collection to increase their battery life.

But how else do these three Garmin computers compare? In this article, we explain everything from the differences in solar charging to why you would choose one over the other.

Screen size, touchscreen and buttons

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The Edge 1040 (left) is the largest Garmin bike computer.
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The Garmin Edge 1040 is the brand’s range-topping cycling computer. It has a huge 3.5-inch touchscreen and a profile on your handlebars to match. Most functions are controlled via the responsive touchscreen, although there are two buttons on the base of the case and an on/off button on its side.

The newer Edge 540 and 840 are much more compact, both having a 2.6-inch screen. The Edge 840 has a touchscreen and an array of seven buttons, so that most functions can be carried out with either, while the Edge 540 is controlled by its seven buttons alone.

A screen that solar charges the computer is an option for all three units, with a thin solar coating over the data area and brown-coloured zones top and bottom that collect solar power more efficiently.

Unit size and weight

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The Garmin Edge 1040 Solar next to the Garmin Edge 1040 – solar charging increases weight by a rather negligible 4g.
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The smaller Edge 540 and 840 are both 85.1x57.8×19.6mm in size. Their weights are slightly different: 80.4g for the Edge 540 and 84.9g for the Edge 850. Adding solar charging increases the weight, in each case by around 4g.

The Edge 1040 is 32.5mm longer and also slightly wider and deeper, with a case size of 117.6×59.3x20mm. It weighs 126g, with solar charging adding an extra 7g.

Battery life

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Garmin uses PowerGlass for the screen to enable solar charging.
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Claimed battery life without solar charging is 26 hours for the Edge 540 and 840, and 35 hours for the Edge 1040. With solar charging, this can be extended to a claimed 32 hours for the smaller units and 45 hours for the Edge 1040, although see our caveats on solar charging later in this article.

Use power save mode and the Solar units’ battery life is claimed to be increased to 60 hours and 100 hours respectively.

Memory

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Memory size ranges from 16GB to 64GB.
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The memory size differs between the three computers: 16GB for the Edge 540, 32GB for the Edge 840 and 64GB for the Edge 1040. They all store the same amount of ride data, but the larger memory capacity is used to enable a larger map area to be stored.

Garmin Edge 1040, 840 and 540 summary comparison

Here’s a summary of the Edge 40-series computers’ physical dimensions, Garmin’s claimed battery life, other features and prices.

Edge model5408401040
Unit size57.8×85.1×19.6mm57.8×85.1×19.6mm59.3×117.6x20mm
Screen size2.6 inch (66mm)2.6 inch (66mm)3.5 inch (88.9mm)
Screen resolution246×322 pixels246×322 pixels282×470 pixels
Weight solar84.9g88.9g133g
Weight non-solar80.4g84.8g126g
TouchscreenNYY
Claimed battery life solar32 hours32 hours45 hours
Claimed battery life solar, power save60 hours60 hours100 hours
Claimed max solar gain per hour25 min25 min42 min
Claimed battery life non-solar26 hours26 hours35 hours
Memory16GB32GB64GB
Price solar UK£449.99£519.99£629.99
Price non-solar UK£349.99£449.99£519.99
Price solar US$449.99$549.99$749.99
Price non-solar US$349.99$449.99$599.99
Price solar Europe€499.99€599.99€749.99
Price non-solar Europe€399.99€499.99€599.99
Price solar AustraliaAU$749AU$879AU$1299
Price non-solar AustraliaAU$599AU$749AU$1049

Solar charging is more efficient for the Edge 1040

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The Garmin Edge 1040 Solar’s larger screen catches more rays.
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The big feature update with the launch of Garmin’s 40-series computers is the inclusion of solar charging. For all three, it’s an option rather than a built-in feature. You can opt out and choose a non-solar version from the Garmin range and save some money in the process – up to £100 depending on the model.

Solar charging provides useful additional battery life – at least if you’re riding somewhere sunny.

Garmin tells you how much battery life you’ve gained on your ride. On a grey winter day in the UK, I found this minimal – a couple of minutes per hour. But during the summer, the Edge 1040 Solar told me I was regularly adding around 15 minutes of charge per hour, even with mixed shade from trees.

The larger screen of the Edge 1040 makes its solar charging more effective than the Edge 540 and Edge 840. Garmin quotes a maximum solar gain of 42 minutes per hour for the Edge 1040, against 25 minutes for the smaller units.

The solar collector makes the screen dimmer in the solar than the non-solar units, so you might find you need to increase the screen brightness – which rather defeats the benefits of solar charging.

Whether you need solar charging also depends on the type of riding you do. All three Edge units offer over 24 hours of claimed battery life, even in non-solar format. The Edge 1040 Solar pushes that up to a claimed 45 hours, or 100 hours if you turn on power save mode.

This is a double-edged sword though. It’s easy to get complacent about charging; on one ride, the Edge 1040 Solar gave up on me mid-ride because I hadn’t bothered to check its battery level before heading out.