Despite its very modest price, this new base model from Bryton picks up signals from just about every constellation of navigation satellites up there: GPS, Galileo, GLONASS, BDS and QZSS. It has a built-in barometric altimeter and works with Bluetooth LE sensors for speed, cadence and heart rate.
The monochrome 2in screen has five pages of data available and is easy to see in daylight, so you'll only need the backlight at night. We found that the claimed battery life of 16 hours is accurate, though it's less if you use the screen's backlight frequently.
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Weird not to have included a Lezyne in this list.
We did consider adding the Mega XL but the price point probably just counts it out of this guide, it's in the main one though. The cheaper Lezyne units didn't score high enough in the reviews to make it in.
Have the Bryton and do not recommend it. Quit uploading data after three months and Bryton HRM I got with it drifts all over the place, like swings of 40-50 bpm within 5-10 seconds. Totally unreliable. Have submitted three or four tickets to Bryton with no response. Otherwise, it is great.