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Garmin Fenix 7 vs Epix: A Very Detailed Comparison

Over the last few days there have been endless discussions about deciding between a Fenix 7 Series and Epix Series unit, so I figured a more detailed comparison was in order. In my case, I’ve been using the units for almost two months, and often side by side. An Epix on one wrist, and a Fenix 7 on the other. So I’ve got direct comparison data, including battery burn charts for long 7-hour activities, on how they actually handle the real world with all the features enabled.

Now at a high level, undoubtedly, the display is the main difference. But that display actually drives quite a few other factors that are less obvious. Things like map clarity, graphing detail, how the unit reacts when on your wrist, and even general day-to-day visibility. And it’s probably important to set aside any perceived notions around ‘pretty display’ units from a few years ago. Or even from Garmin’s own line-up. The just-released Venu 2 Plus shares the same screen, but doesn’t feel anything like Epix. That’s because Garmin appears to have done everything possible to make Epix mirror the Fenix, rather than approach it as a broad mid-tier consumer device like the Venu series.

So, with that, this post is divided up into two basic parts:

A) A quick overview of the Fenix/EPIX models
B) A deep-dive into all those nuanced differences between the Fenix & Epix

Now, you can hit Play on the video above, which in this case is probably the best thing to do, because many of these are display-based, and it’s easier to see those in the real-world with real video footage of how the units react and display.

The Model Options:

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For the moment, I’m not going to belabor all of the Fenix 7 Series models in this post. There are 22 of them in total, plus other country-specific SKUs. For example, the UK has a different shade of grey than the rest of the world on certain models. I’m not kidding. It’s a different SKU there. Here’s the official chart of listings from Garmin, for at least the US market.

The most important thing to know is that all these units share the same software features across the board. They all have music, the same optical heart rate sensor, the same GPS chipset manufacturer, the same contactless payment support, the same WiFi/Bluetooth/ANT+, and all the same sport profiles and related features. Same. Same. Same.

Instead, deciding on a model is all about three sorta simple things:

A) Size
B) Solar
C) Sapphire edition or not

To recap, at the high level you’ve got basically three Fenix 7 Series sizes to choose from, and a single Epix Series size:

Fenix 7S – The Smallest: This is a 42mm case with a 1.2” screen
Fenix 7 – The Middle Bear: This is a 47mm case with a 1.3” screen
Epix – The Only Bear: This is identical to the middle Fenix 7 in size, at 47mm and 1.3”
Fenix 7X – The Biggest: This is a 51mm case with a 1.4” screen.

Then, if choosing Fenix 7, you need to decide whether or not you want solar or not. In general, think of solar as incremental power. If you go out for a 45-minute walk in the winter in the sun, it’ll add a relatively trivial amount of power (and zero power under a coat). Whereas, if you spend an entire day in the summer in the sun, it’ll add a very substantial amount of power. I have battery charts later on showing exactly how much. But there is no solar on Epix.

Fenix 7 Series: Solar offered
Epix Series: No solar offered

Ok, so then we get to the question of ‘Sapphire’ edition or not. In the case of the Fenix 7 Series, the ‘Sapphire’ tag kinda replaces the ‘Pro’ tag in the Fenix 6 series. There are no Fenix 7 Pro units. Sapphire is the new Pro.

Sapphire on both Epix and Fenix 7 does four very specific things:

A) Gets you Sapphire glass: This is more durable against scratches, but also has slightly dimmer visibility. In 2022, I wouldn’t overthink the scratch element, the glass they use on the regular non-sapphire units is very strong and I rarely scratch watches with it, despite treating them like crap.
B) Gets you titanium bezel/case: The Sapphire units have a Titanium bezel and case, so they’re officially swankier looking. Some also have DLC coating too.
C) Gets you Multi-band GPS: This is the new dual-frequency GPS, which theoretically is the holy grail of GPS accuracy. In practice, it’s slightly better, but really only in very specific challenging situations (like up against massive cliffs, and sometimes against exceptionally tall buildings). It’s not perfect, and it’s not yet the holy grail. Maybe with updates in a year it will be. COROS added this to their Vertix 2 last summer, and I have seen slight/incremental improvement since then. They share the same chipset as Garmin.
D) Gets you 32GB of storage instead of 16GB: This is primarily for map usage (or music), but it also gets you pre-loaded maps for your region. In the case of non-Sapphire units, you simply tap the ‘Map Manager’ within the watch and choose your region (continent). You’ll wait a few hours for that to sync over WiFi and then you’re done. I detail the sizes of the maps in my in-depth review, but the short version is that North America and Europe are about 8-10GB each, so you can’t fit both together on a 16GB unit. You’d have to swap back and forth.

Here’s a chart that Garmin has that actually explains it way better than I could possibly do with MSPAINT:

Fenix7-Series-VS-Epix-Comparison

At this point, I wouldn’t let either the Multi-band or map storage bits be a decision driver individually, however, they could be together. For example, I often travel back and forth – so having the maps for both continents is handy for me. And, since I’m a geekier person, I’m interested to see how multi-band GPS will play out over the next year or two. Thus I’m more likely to go for a Sapphire edition. I find zero value though in the sapphire glass or titanium bezel case.

Of course, you do you; I’m just giving you my thinking.

The Key Epix vs Fenix Differences:

DSC_8106

Now, I’ve broken up these into a list of bulleted sections. Because I like compartmentalized sections…and lists. This list also mirrors the order of the video above (which also has chapters). I even went as far as asking Garmin’s product team last week for any other trivial differences between them. Also note that while the basis for my real-world comparison is Epix Sapphire vs Fenix 7 Solar Sapphire, that none of the items below change when going non-Sapphire, except that the non-Sapphire visibility is generally a little bit better (less dim). But I don’t have any non-Sapphire units to compare.

1) The Price: Fenix 7 starts at $699 and goes over $1,000, whereas Epix starts at $899 and goes to $999. So if you compare like models – Fenix 7 Solar Sapphire to Epix Sapphire, it’s a span of a $100 difference ($899 for Fenix 7 Solar Sapphire to $999 for Epix Sapphire). If you compare non-Sapphire to non-Sapphire, it’s a $200 difference between base models ($699 for Fenix vs $899 for Epix).

2) The Display Mode Variants: Let’s start with the easy one. The Fenix 7 screen is legit always-on all the time. Twenty-four hours a day, no matter what you or the watch are doing, it’s on. Though, it does have a sleep-mode if you want it. It also has a backlight, which is configurable in steps of 5% increments from 0 to 100%, depending on whether you’re in sleep or regular mode.

Then there’s the Epix. At its base/default configuration it has two core modes:

A) Always-on EPIX: In this config, as long as there’s some (even tiny, like typing) movement, the screen remains on. If you turn your wrist towards you, it brightens the display, but it’s usually perfectly readable without the added brightness. If you leave it on a table for 60-seconds unattended, it’ll turn off the display. Similarly, if you’re sitting perfectly still reading a book, the display may turn off depending on how still you are. I’m apparently not a very still person, as this virtually never goes off for me – instead it just goes back and forth between dim-but-easilyviewable mode, and bright mode. In any case, in this always-on mode, the watch lasts 6 days in smartwatch mode. I can confirm that over the past month+, this number is very valid and matches my real-world usage with ~1hr of workouts each day on average (GPS or indoors) using a default watch face.

B) Gesture-based EPIX: In this mode, the display turns off when you’re not actively looking at it. As you raise your wrist, it turns on. It’s worthwhile noting though you can set this differently for workout vs general usage. So in workout mode you can say always-on, but the rest of the day gesture-based. In the overall gesture-based mode, it gets 16 days of smartwatch battery life.

Note that in the case of Epix, it presumes the display goes to sleep each night. The default is 10PM to 6AM, but you can change the timing and behavior within the Sleep Mode settings though. I explain this more in the ‘dimming’ section below.

3) Display Technology: Next, the biggie, the display itself. You’ve got that AMOLED display which is 65,000 colors, instead of the Fenix 7 series 64-colors and transflective MIPS screen. The AMOLED display is the same as the Venu 2 series, which has been received well. The size of both screens are identical, listed as 1.3”, and the internal viewable size of both screens is also identical (the solar ring is ‘outside’ of that viewable area).

Probably the easiest way of illustrating this vast color difference is a simple watch face I created using the Connect IQ app. These are with the backlights enabled at default settings upon wrist raise. Of course, it’s also hard to make out the clarity in a photo of a photo.

clip_image001[8]

Now as an interesting aside, if you do create a custom watch-face, it will likely go into gesture-mode (as was the case above). Garmin does have specifications for created AMOLED-series always-on watch faces, but the stock ‘Face It’ feature to make your own faces doesn’t make always-on faces – so those force me into gesture mode on the Epix, whereas on the Fenix it’s there the entire time. We’ll talk about burn-in in a moment.

4) Resolution: Next, we’ve got the resolution of the display, which is how many pixels it has. Essentially, the more the better. With more pixels you can show more detail. The Epix screen is 416x416px, while the Fenix 7 screen is 260x260px (Fenix 7s is 240x240px, and 7X is 280x280px). However, since the physical size of the screen is the same, this results in more pixels per inch (PPI – remember that from printing days?). In the case of the Fenix series, it’s 200ppi, whereas the Epix series is 326ppi – so dramatically higher. Now, by itself, this isn’t super obvious in basic running fields. Where it’s more important is charts, data graphs, maps, and anything where detail is needed So, let’s look at that.

5) Map Detail & Visibility: One of the easiest examples of this is simply in mapping. While both units use the *EXACT SAME MAPS*, the Epix displays details better, at a higher zoom level. This is shown in countless scenarios, but in my video above I walk through a very specific one that I’ve screen captured below. Both of these units are showing the exact same spot at the exact same zoom level (300m), and both of them are set to defaults for screen brightness with a popularity routing map shown. Notice how the Fenix 7 (left) is missing numerous trails that the Epix (right) shows. For example, that trail that cuts along the top of the screen. Or the added mountain symbols. Or the entire selection of trails cutting across the middle-bottom of the screen. Or the names of the mountains. None of that detail can be shown (yet) on the Fenix because it doesn’t have the resolution to pull it off. Instead, you don’t see that detail till you zoom further down. In which case again, the Epix shows other details that Fenix lacks until you zoom down yet again. It’s a never-ending cycle.

EpixvsFenixMap

This is more than just maps though. You see it in golf courses for example, as well as even ski resort/ski trail maps. Plus of course just clarity in things like the charts too.

6) Brightness: Next, is brightness, the AMOLED is by far brighter in my experience in every scenario – including in direct sun. At least with the two Sapphire editions I have. In bright sunny sun on top of a volcano amidst desert-like lava fields, the AMOLED display is super bright and easy to read. And the same is true in a jungle under dense tree cover. While the Fenix 7 series is certainly easy to read in direct sun, it’s the less bright scenarios that the Epix really shines – without having to utilize the backlight – or change the backlight settings. By default the Fenix 7 series uses a 20% backlight option, which of course you can increase to get it brighter. But as you can see here, it’s not really even close (Epix left, Fenix 7 right):

Here’s another:

Looking at some direct sun scenarios, here’s my wrist in direct sun on an island in summer-like weather, and the Epix is easily read:

Point being, I wouldn’t be concerned about brightness with Epix. Whereas, at least with the slightly dimmer Sapphire edition of the Fenix 7, there are cases where it’s not as visible, especially in early evening or darker conditions, where the Epix really shines.

7) Dimming: Now let’s go the opposite direction – how visible is it when you want it to be dark? In that case, both units actually have sleep mode options. For Epix it’ll be enabled by default, and you’ll configure your sleep time, and then it goes into a do-not-disturb sleep mode with a simplified watch face. In this mode the watch display is off, and to see the display, you’ll just press a button. Simply touching/taping it won’t change anything.

The Epix actually has a lower dimness setting for sleep mode than regular mode. Thus it won’t blind you at night. I’ve had no issues with the Epix display dimness levels at night (a concern from some other AMOLED units in the past). Here’s the Epix in sleep mode, once a button is pressed (I show the Fenix in sleep mode in the video too, as well as how to configure it).

Whereas for the Fenix 7 series, at night the display is still ‘on’, though no backlight unless you specify it. One thing to keep in mind is that in a dark room at night (like a bedroom), you won’t be able to see the time either unless you press a button. So basically for the middle-of-the-night scenario, a button press is required no matter the watch. And you can use gesture backlight for both watches too (which is by default off in sleep mode).

Oh, and quirky geek aside. The Epix and Fenix actually have two different control levels for brightness. During normal daytime usage, the Epix display brightness has three options. But at night in sleep mode it becomes four options. Similarly, the Fenix 7 normally adjusts backlight brightness in 10% blocks, with 20% being the default. Whereas in sleep mode it’s 5% blocks with 5% being the default.

8) Battery Considerations: So within the battery camp we’ve basically got two core scenarios to consider: Day to day smartwatch wear, and workout GPS times. Let’s start with a simple chart from Garmin, which outlines the claimed battery levels for each model:

Battery-Fenix7SeriesWithEpix

Now, in my testing I primarily focused on the Epix Sapphire & Fenix 7 Solar Sapphire, and in an always-on configuration. Without question, I’ve been hitting that 6-day always-on claim near perfectly, using the default settings and inclusive of ~1hr of workout time per day (blend of GPS and indoor workouts). Some days more workout time, some days less. But a safe average of an hour a day here in December. In terms of the Fenix 7, that too seems to trend towards its battery claims for watch mode, but honestly given they’re so high, it’s hard to judge precisely.

So what about workout modes? Well, let’s go big! Here are two workouts, using the watches effectively side by side with ‘all the things’ enabled. I’ve got the Epix Sapphire on my left wrist, and the Fenix 7 Solar Sapphire on my right wrist. For this first one, a 7hr 15min ride, I’ve got always-on display enabled, multi-band satellites enabled, optical heart rate enabled, course/route following/navigation loaded and enabled, ClimbPro enabled, an ANT+ power meter connected, Bluetooth connectivity to my phone enabled with LiveTrack enabled. In other words, literally everything is turned on at the highest possible settings to burn as much battery as possible. Here’s the Epix at the start (sorry, the photo isn’t super crispy as it’s a screenshot from a video I took).

clip_image001[6]

The ride started in the sun, then went into the forests for a few hours of climbing, and then above the tree-line for a few hours of lava fields, before descending back down into the forests and out of the sun.  For the Epix, it started at 92% and ended at 59% (a 32% decrease), the projected battery capacity then based on this ride was 21.72hrs. Whereas the Fenix 7 Sapphire Solar went from 98% to 77% (a 21% decrease), with a projected battery duration of 34.12hrs.

VolcanoBatteryStats

You’ll notice that in both cases, these estimated battery calculations are actually *ABOVE* the Garmin claims for multi-band GPS. And Garmin’s battery claims don’t even assume the battery-draining course navigation either. Meaning, I could easily significantly increase my estimated capacity further by not turning on all the features.

If we switch to a 5-hour long jungle hike with the exact same setup, except minus the sun (overcast conditions and under dense tree cover for quite a bit of it). You’ll see again very strong numbers – estimated 18.91 hours capacity for Epix versus 20.83hrs for the Fenix 7 Solar Sapphire. The denser trees would have likely caused the unit to increase power to the GPS to try and increase signal reception, and the Fenix 7 Solar would have had less solar power here due to lack of sun from clouds and trees. But again, remember – EVERYTHING was turned on here in a worst-case scenario.

BatteryCharge2

Now, why might my battery times be better in the long ride than Garmin’s official estimates? Well, likely because those estimates were done months ago. They haven’t changed since, despite Garmin’s firmware and efficiency getting better and better. And in fact, if I look at long rides in the sun on similar islands from early December, the battery capacity was more akin to Garmin’s official claims (lower). In other words, I think they’re actually pretty conservative at this point, and it wouldn’t surprise me to see those battery claims eventually adjusted upwards.

(Pro Tip: You can create your own battery charts using the DCR Analyzer. This will properly display battery durations for devices from Garmin, Wahoo, Stages, and Hammerhead. COROS is aiming to add support this spring. Inversely, note that Garmin’s Vivoactive & Venu series units do not write this information to the .FIT files.)

9) Flashlight: The Fenix 7X has a flashlight on it (the other Fenix 7 units do not), this flashlight can be used in a variety of scenarios including simply finding your way around your home in the dark at night, to illuminating a trail ahead of you while you run, to an impromptu bike light. The 7X flashlight is comprised of two white LEDs, and one red LED. The brightness level is roughly in the ballpark of my iPhone 13 Pro, maybe a smidge less. It’s more than enough to blind anyone in the same dark room though. Finally, it also has a running-cadence driven flashlight that will match your running cadence and flash white and red lights either forwards or backwards based on your arm swing. In practice, I didn’t find this works super precisely, but it still manages to let people know that you’re there/visible – so I’m not sure it’s a huge deal that it’s not perfectly timed. Overall though, the Fenix 7X flashlight is awesome and super useful, let’s be clear about that.

The Epix series does not (very sadly) have a dedicated flashlight, but does have a flashlight mode. Just like with the Fenix 7X you can simply double-tap the upper left button, which goes to a flashlight user interface with multiple levels of white light as well as red light. It’s not ideal for lighting up a trail, but is plenty bright to light up a bedroom at night, or blind your significant other lying in bed. Like with the 7X, the red-light option is less harsh and honestly a better late-night option. I show how this works in the video up above.

Fenix7-vs-Epix-Wannabe-Flashlight

Note that the other Fenix 7 units do have this same feature as well, though, it’s not nearly as bright as the Epix screen – simply because the backlight of the AMOLED is essentially a lighthouse compared to the Fenix 7’s backlight being a small candle. Still, I’ve also used the Fenix 7 flashlight nonetheless to find things in the dark. So it does work in a pinch too.

10) Accuracy (GPS & HR): This one is easy – they’re virtually identical. Now, I’ve done far more detail on this in my in-depth reviews on both, but in almost every scenario, they acted virtually identical (both good and bad). And that makes sense, they’ve got the exact same optical HR sensor, the exact same GPS chipset, and the exact same size and case materials. Now, you may (and probably will) see optical heart rate differences between the different sized Fenix 7 models as, typically speaking, heavier models can introduce more bounce, which degrades accuracy. Though ironically, in my testing, the Fenix 7X actually handled perfectly in even hard and cold-weather interval runs. But I have less 7X HR data than I do 7/Epix direct comparison data. This is also true for barometric altimeter accuracy, where they were in absolute lockstep on all my test activities.

The point being that the two units appear identical in this area (both good and bad).

11) Pixel Burn-In Potential: Pixel display burn-in can occur in AMOLED/OLED (and other types of) screens when bright images are left on for an extended period of time without change. For example, a very bright-white watch face with sharp lines. Companies (both watchmakers and phone/tablet/TV/etc makers) mitigate this through a variety of methods. For example in Garmin’s Venu & Epix series, they do what’s called pixel-shifting, which slightly moves an image a pixel or two in a different direction occasionally to turn off/on pixels. Generally speaking, this isn’t obvious/viewable to your eye.  Whereas the Fenix series has no issues with burn-in.

In terms of potential for pixel burn-in on the Epix watch, I suspect we’re in a far better place than Garmin was with the original Venu (which uses a different display and a handful of people have seen burn-in issues). I don’t believe I’ve seen any reports on the Venu 2 series for burn-in, which is the same screen as Epix. Though, it’s also only about 8-9 months old. We’ve seen Garmin since introduce specific guidelines around Connect IQ watch faces to be enabled in always-on mode, plus there are aspects like the sleep mode, dimming, and powering off after 60-seconds of non-movement. All of which are designed to substantially reduce the chances of burn-in. I’m personally not worried about it in normal usage in 2022 given the measures that have been taken and the lessons learned Garmin has with other units, but ultimately only time will tell.

12) Weight: This obviously varies considerably by which model you choose (size-wise, materials, etc…). However, if comparing the two Sapphire units to each other, there is only 3g in difference between them. I measured the Fenix 7 Solar Sapphire and it was 74g, whereas the Epix Sapphire was 71g. I suspect most of us would consider that basically a wash for practical purposes.

13) Connect IQ Support Levels: Both Epix & Fenix 7 support the same Connect IQ System Level (System 5), however, Epix supports a greater subset of features within it, due to its higher resolution display. Meaning that 3rd party apps can develop more vibrant/detailed/rich apps on Epix that might not be available down the road on non-AMOLED screens. While I’m sure there are some examples today (folks are welcome to drop them below in the comments), I’m not aware of any big-ticket ones. In terms of performance, I measured both watches using the Connect IQ Benchmarking tool, and the scores were very similar. The Fenix 7 Solar Sapphire: CPU 9.4 / 58.8 Pips, and Epix Sapphire: CPU 9.4 / 62.5 Pips – both on Connect IQ 4.0.6 (software 7.20). This matches my real-world experience which shows that both units act virtually identical side by side in terms of changing pages, display data, map movements, etc…

14) The Random Extra List: This is a list of extra things that didn’t make the main list above. I’ll also add things to this over time:

A) White on black text: For Epix, you have white lettering on black text for sport profiles. Whereas for Fenix it’s black lettering on white text. Normally, I dislike white on black – partially because it’s a pain in the butt to take photos of, and partially because I usually find black on white easier to see. However, in this case (as well as the Apple Watch, Venu series, Samsung Galaxy series, and a few others), the white lettering is easy and crisp enough to see that I’ve got no complaints at all here.

B) The Epix can display more data fields per page: On the Fenix 7 (middle unit), you can display 6 data fields per page, but the Epix can display 8 data fields per page.

C) You see, I don’t yet have a C: But eventually I will.

Ok, that’s all I’ve got for now!

Wrap-Up:

DSC_8130

Phew!

Ok, hopefully this answers some questions when trying to choose. Obviously, there are a lot of options, but I think probably the biggest factor you’ll want to simply consider is battery life scenarios and how you use your units.

For me, I’ve got virtually no reason to do a 30hrs+ long GPS adventure. It’s just not my cup of tea. And in the unlikely event I did find myself in such a situation (like wanting to track a really long journey), I could use a charging puck with a battery pack to keep it topped up (you can charge while using). Further, I don’t mind dealing with charging roughly once a week for my typical workout usage. Probably a bit more often when I do longer workouts during a week (spring/summer).

So for my use cases, I’m in the Epix camp. I think the display is awesome, and gives just so much better visibility and clarity than Fenix 7 does. However, the downside for me is that I typically prefer a smaller/lighter watch, such as something in the Forerunner 745 range (my normal go-to). While I quickly get used to wearing the larger watches, it’s not my comfort food. Similarly, many of you like larger watches like the 7X series ones, and so there’s no option there either.

I think it’ll be really fascinating to see what Garmin does with the Fenix & Epix brands over the next 2-5 years. Certainly, if we look to a Fenix 8 or Fenix 9 series with continued battery optimization, there probably won’t be a MIPS display option anymore – it’ll be all AMOLED (or similar). My bet is that Enduro becomes that brand/platform for MIPS, for the dwindling segment of the population that wants or needs that kind of screen. The question is, with Fenix being the most valuable brand – where does the Epix brand go. Things I’ve pondered…

With that – I’ll let you get back to pondering your choices. Feel free to drop any questions below, and I’ll try and help out – or, countless others in the community can too! More opinions is always good here.

Thanks for reading!

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324 Comments

  1. Leo

    Sorry to saybut you don’t inderstand batterylife.

    You say “ For me, I’ve got virtually no reason to do a 30hrs+ long GPS adventure.” I can understand that and agree with you, BUT. Those 30 hours are when the device is fully charged and new. My watchs is most of the times not fully charged and it’s definitely not new anymore.

    I have a 5 year old forerunner 935 which started with 24 hours of gps time. Plenty, according to your rules. But now it’s 5 yours old and only 10 hours gps time are left. Which means when it’s 50% charges I cannot go out for a long bike ride. An all day hike is just doable. That’s the reason a forerunner 745 with 16 hours batterylife isn’t plenty. After a couple of years that will be 6 or 7 hours.

    I understand you have a drawer full of new watches and never use an old one so you don’t see the problem.
    And maybe I’m the odd one out and everybody else buy an very expensive watch every 2 years or so.

    • You always seem really angry in your responses/comments. I don’t understand.

      In any case, that’s all fine, but all devices battery capacity eventually age. Including the Fenix 7. How that will age? Honestly, we don’t know yet. We could presume the same as your FR935, or my wife’s Fenix 5S. But we simply don’t know yet – so presuming to predict five years from now based on devices five years ago seems kinda silly.

      Similarly, I don’t think I have to spell out that if you leave home with a 25% charged device, you’re not going to go as far as a fully 100% charged device. I assumed that was kinda obvious. Of course, it’s also obvious that you have to charge less often too when you get more days of battery life.

      In any case, my preference for balancing Watch style with battery life is my preference. I’m not sure why you’re angry about it. I’ve clearly outlined every factor above to let people make their own decisions.

    • Leo

      One more thing: if you have to charge less often (because of better battery life) you have less chargecycles and less wear on the battery.

      Sure, I know I cannot go on a 5 hour ride with 25% left of max 16 hours gps time. But you over and over again tell everybody the only use of a 30 hour gps batterylife, in your view, is doing a ultra. Well, it’s not. It’s convenience of not having to charge that much and prevent batterywear by reducing chargecycles.

      (I’m not angry, english is not my native language. I do apologize if I offended someone)

    • Nikolay Konovski

      Hi Leo,

      About battery aging, maybe you should try to replace your battery, not at 100% sure but when Litium battery go under 70% ot its capacity it was marked as exhausted. 5 from 24hrs sound like problem.

      In my experience one FR 210 start with ~8h gps time and after maybe 5yrs it have 6.5-7h
      A Edge 510 (second hand) have a maybe 5yrs service without notable battery decrease.
      Also I have FR645 and Edge 530 both with 2yrs of service and close to original capacity.

      Have a nice day.

    • Yeah, I’d like to see Garmin do better in the battery replacement arena. I might tackle a post in the coming weeks trying to sort out all the battery replacement costs for each company.

      For example, Apple has flat-rate published prices for Apple Watch battery (out of warranty costs) per country. Roughly around $79. Garmin doesn’t publish prices anywhere, but people report that for a Fenix series unit, it’s about $180-$200.

      I don’t know what others do, and some others may not offer options at all. I also totally get that Apple subsidizes that battery cost with the fact that you’re locked into their phone ecosystem to own an Apple Watch. But hey, that’s competition, and not the consumers problem.

      But I’d like to see all companies do better here. So in the same way I’ve continued to increase pushing for software updates for perfectly functional watches, and highlighting when companies aren’t doing that, I’ll likely start outlining the battery replacement options (or lackthereof).

    • Sean Parchem

      So positive, balanced and helpful Ray. I’m assuming leo does not use english as his first language? Either way I really appreciate all of your help on the site, Even if you can’t reply to all the personal messages……..

    • Dominic

      For me the Garmin Fenix 7x is my go to. The extra battery life is such a great feature to have. I do long distance hiking where the extra gps time is a huge a deal. The AMOLED display is nice but the MIP display is also nice considering it reflects sunlight.

    • ACD

      I agree Ray, that would be good if you could pursue this questioning with Garmin.

      I recognise that software as well as hardware can cause battery issues. Take my young son’s Vivoactive 4S. On our third replacement. Battery drains in a day with no GPS activity.

      My heart sank when looking at the forums – it’s clear Garmin have an issue with this watch and according to them there is no resolution as yet.

      In the meantime however my Epix 2 battery is proving to be very impressive.

    • Carlton

      Please include include Right to Repair battery/parts availability in your battery replacement post. Battery replacement is relatively easy on Garmin watches, at least compared to an iPhone. So it seems odd that Apple is genuine replacement iPhone batteries to users fir them to install and Garmin is not.

      I have a Garmin Chronos. If I have 40% battery life and go outside for a run with the weather below 40F, the battery dies within 5 minutes. I contacted Garmin about a replacement battery and was told I had to send my watch to them and would receive a refurbished replacement. I don’t recall the exact cost, but was a few hundred US dollars and was basically the used value of the watch. But non-genuine replacement batteries can be purchased from eBay for $20.

      Most jewelry ships offer free battery replacement on high end watches. Garmin needs to do a better job supporting long-term battery replacement, especially since these watches are so expensive and aging batteries can dramatically shorten their useful life. They should sell replacement batteries and support cost-effective right-to-repair for those interested.

    • Ken

      Ray,
      If you’re going to do something on battery replacement, please make sure to include a ‘how’ section in addition to cost – must it be mailed back to the manufacturer at a cost of not having my device for a week or two or are there a significant number of in network (apple store) or independent retailers (jewelry/watch repair) stores that can have me up & running the same day. Does the manufacturer only allow trained & certified repair centers which will limit the number or retailers? Is there anything unique to a particular device that makes it harder/easier than others (ie. the old, ’80s Casio calculator watches had significantly more buttons than any other watch out there that all had to be aligned before closing the case)

    • Yup, I’ll include those aspects too.

    • Wevver

      Fantastic presentation of technology and I love all your reviews. I do not know if you can provide companies with feedback and understand why many would want you to buy new rather than keep the old operational (I guess there is always an element to ensure you eventually but new). Could there be any mobile chargers or other options of battery replacement?

    • Matt K

      I agree. I think the AMOLED is nice. Just like I had with Apple Watch. But it does eat up battery and as an ultra runner those extra 7 hrs makes a difference. I have a Fenix 6S Pro and after the first year, I lost significant battery life. Right when the 1 yr warranty ran out. I got a recertified replacement, now just over a year later the same issue. I can get no where near 24hr GPS. I had to charge once during a 30hr ultra with course navigation and power saving mode (GPS, HR, screen off). Ran same race1 year later with same settings and had to recharge watch 3x. Had to put in Ultra mode just to make it. So Garmins best values are still less than normal use as they are basing off brand new battery and under specific conditions, not avg use. I assume new tech does help, but it will eventually dwindle. So while I’d love an Epix although a bit big for me, I’d have to stick with the Fenix 7 or the additional battery life. I’m hoping it will last long than a year or two with decent battery life. But it seems pushing new firmware hurts the battery more than helping in my experience.

  2. Another Dave

    Does the Fexix 7X also have the watch face flashlight mode, or only the new case lights? If so, is there a red light? Thanks.

  3. Catalin

    I’m quite torn between Fenix and Epix.

    I have abandoned/sold/returned multiple AMOLED smartwatches due to battery life and how cumbersome and unreliable the gesture-to-view is, and I have always kept my Vivoactive 4.

    I keep thinking that going for the Epix I will just do the same mistake for the N-th time. The 6-day AOD battery life is plenty, but having a screen glowing in the dark continuously when I don’t need it to is also distracting and wasteful. Also, I’m not sure how an AMOLED screen holds up over more than like 2 years or so.

    The ideal situation for me would have been a Fenix 7 with a bit more reflectivity compared to the old MIP screens. I wonder if there is any brightness difference between Fenix 7 and 6 ? I read that the Enduro screen is brighter than the Fenix 6x, can anyone confirm ? Maybe Garmin did improve on this ?

    Thanks!

    • I can compare the Enduro side by side on Monday and will post a photo. Cheers!

    • David

      Maybe Ray can chime in here but with my Apple Watch, I find it dims the screen so precisely in even extreme dark environments that it is never distracting. In a movie theater etc. I never think to put it in “theater mode” (that turns off the screen) because it is never an issue. Does the Epix dim the screen using a light sensor to be appropriate? Hopefully. While I don’t wear my Apple Watch to bed, when I did a handful of times I did turn off the screen and it seems Garmin has a way to do this automatically by time of day so that would be useful. In general I find the screens of a lit AMOLED watch surprisingly NOT distracting in even dark environments IF the developer did their job correctly.

    • B J Shipe

      I have been using a Fenix 6X Sapphire for several months. Just purchased a Fenix 7X Sapphire Solar from Garmin. Initial impressions are that the brightness and color saturation are significantly better on the 6X. The screen on the 7X model is considerably dimmer and harder to read in indirect sunlight. So far, I am a little disappointed with the 7X and some of its limitations (screen brightness, resolution, color saturation, limitations in watch faces, inconsistent touch screen performance).

    • Catalin

      Thanks, I read this on other forums too. At first sight I would say that the touchscreen layer reduces the brightness, but on my touch-enabled Vivoactive 4 the brightness seems to be the same as the non-touch Fenix 6 so it normally cannot be this.

      The Fenix 7 seems to support 256 colors compared to the Fenix 6’s 64 colors so the screen looks to be a bit different (to be honest, 16 colors would be enough for me if this would mean more brightness :) ).

      This being said, I am now leaning towards the Epix. But I read some bad things about the button feel lacking feedback or feeling like multiple clicks on depress (on both Fenix and Epix) so I am not sure what’s up with Garmin at this time…maybe the pandemic took a toll on the QA, or maybe it’s just a first batch issue…who knows.

    • Seth

      Maybe it is because of solar? I read that solar versions have worse screen.
      I completely don’t understand why there is no X without solar, it’s idiotic.

    • Dave R

      Also curious about this and how Enduro will stand up in general (considering a switch to F7 Sapphire or Epix Sapphire).

    • Vangelis

      Totally agree.

  4. TedP

    This is great, thanks. Particularly GPS chipset; they’re all the “same”. That 5k site was trying to posit Sapphire had something different (Mediatek vs Sony). This would be important for people who geek out on this and felt Mediatek was better. Your in depth showed GPS on all F7 and Epix versions were pretty good.

    Is it then safe to assume same GPS chip for all and just a distinction between dual band or not?

    • Garmin confirmed it the same identical chipset supplier on all units.

    • Volker

      So, if Garmin were willing, they could easily enable multi gnss multi band on all F7serie/Epix devices or are there how/sw limitations, which would prevent this?

    • Garin confirmed it’s vendor (Airoha), but it’s unclear if it’s the exact same chipset and just software blocked. We won’t really know until someone tears down a unit (not my specialty – I wouldn’t know how to put it back together again). Realistically they’d just have to tear-down a base-unit, not both units.

  5. Giuseppe

    I just have a big doubt and I think you wrote the answer between the lines but I would like your direct comment on the subject. Between the Fenix 7X Solar Power Glass and the Fenix 7X Solar Power Sapphire which screen is best seen and without reflections? It is important to know this because, in my case, a clearly visible display without annoying reflections counts more, even giving up the multi gps and 32gb memory.

    One more question, in the 16gb Fenix 7X Solar can you install the map of Italy only or do you have to download the whole of Europe?

    Thanks for your top reviews

    • I haven’t seen those two units side by side, so not entirely sure there.

      For maps though, unfortunately Garmin requires you download the whole of Europe. It’s kinda silly. Firstly because it takes up way more space, secondly because it takes up way more bandwidth for them, and thirdly because it’s immensely more slow than just downloading a single country.

    • Brian Reiter

      I think this is tied to the historical reality that they sell each of these regions as map packs.

      It feels like a bit of a 🖕that they continue to sell these maps to fenix 6 (and specialty SKUs), forerunner 945, and marq (!) customers. You only get the region maps that came bundled with your watch and we need another $60 /yr to give you the open source maps (with disclaimer!) for each of the other regions you want. It’s a bad look.

    • Hlavis

      You don’t have to download whole Europe. It can be divided into 3 parts in Garmin Express for a while (also for fenix 6, F945…). You have the Europe East, Central and West. It the name of the map packages in the watch settings and in the Garmin Express. So you have the option in Express to download all of them (TopoActive Europe) as package (which will download 3 files – East, Central and West) or just the part and file you want to. Which country is in which package can be seen in Express too… If you don’t have enough space in your watch, express will offer you to download just a part of the Europe automatically (that’s how I discover it).

    • That doesn’t seem to be the case on my Fenix 7 or Epix units. It’s just all of Europe. If I go into Garmin Express, and then dive down into it – it’s all or nothing, with no further options for country/portion. Both in the textual information, but also the graphic that it shows.

      Are you seeing something different on a Fenix 7 or Epix unit?

    • Volker

      This is (was?) only available in Express. But I am seeing this not anymore in Express. I used it one time, but I was only able to download 1 of the 3. A second part wasn’t later offered for download. And as said before, I don’t see this possibility anymore, only the full Europe map.

    • Pieter Willems

      Yes you can split Europe into three segments: West, Central and East. If you connect your Fenix 7 or Epix 2 to a Mac or PC, using Garmin Express, you have the choice to download Europe by segments (e.g. only West or a combination of West and Central).

  6. Hendrik

    Thank you Ray for the excellent and super detailed (“what else did you expect”) comparison.
    As a happy Fenix 6X user I will stay on the sideline for a while, also because I am not yet convinced that burn in will not become an issue. And also since I need to amortize my 6X investment ;-)
    I have to say though that I am surprised Garmin did not also bring out an “Epix X” model, as the more power hungry screen would greatly benefit from the larger X-size battery. I have a feeling such a model could come later as it makes so much sense, but maybe Garmin first wants to test how big the market is for a Fenix type watch with AMOLED screen. Your review and clear opinion alone will make sure though that market demand will be there ;-)

  7. Michael

    Early on in the article you have: “For the moment, I’m not going to belabor all of the Fenix 7 Series models in this post. There’s 22 of them in total, plus other country-specific SKU’s. For example, the UK has a different shade of grey than the rest of the world on certain models. I’m not kidding. It’s a different SKU there. Here’s the official chart of listings from Garmin, for at least the US market.”

    But there’s no chart below, I assume just an oversight. But great article! If I were in the market for a new watch I would have a hard time choosing.

  8. Mr T

    Here is something you may not have experienced yet. I got the Venu 2 because as an of 50 person my eyes aren’t what they used to be.

    With readers. I can’t read the watch with a quick glance. The Amoled is much better.

    • Yup, that’s true. It’s far easier to read the crisper AMOLED.

    • David W.

      Same reason that I got the Epix2- I can read it without my glasses. Way easier than my FR945. That alone makes charging more often worth it.

      This is the same reason I use my Karoo2 instead of my Edge 1030- way easier to read without glasses. Important since I sweat a lot and my glasses get completely coated with sweat. So, I keep them in my pocket and only get them out when I really need them.

  9. Puffolino

    Would be clear foe me, if Garmin would have done a fenix model with all pro features except the shiny sapphire glass.
    The epix seems to be a more risky choice for some reasons: amoled burn in as stated in the manual, higher battery drain and maybe slower display redraws (especially within CIQ apps) because of the higher number of screen pixels.
    So programming will be also a new challenge,
    I wrote already a lot of CIQ apps for fenix & Co but sometimes I failed to do so, like displaying complex QR codes because of the slow drawing routines. Could be even more time critical on the high res Epix – on the other hand even larger codes could be shown.
    App size could be interesting as well, (custom) fonts are used very often and are included in a compressed form which is defined by a special display processor.
    Would be surprising foe me if the same format (which is intersting btw) is used for the amoled display.

  10. Ed Felker

    Great comparison post, Ray. This is super-helpful. I am drawn to both watches for all the reasons you detail. That said, I’m mostly a cyclist and use the Edge series, with my Garmin watch mostly as a backup bike computer/activity tracker/smartwatch. For that reason the Forerunner 9XX line is at the right price point for me compared to the Fenix and Epix line.

    I’m going to keep my relatively new Forerunner 935 until the successor to the 945 line comes out. Question: what features would you think might migrate to the Forerunner 9XX; maybe a premium model with AMOLED and base model without?

    thanks as always for your detailed reviews and videos!

  11. acousticbiker

    Thanks, Ray!

    Have you seen the figure posted by Garmin staff here?

    link to forums.garmin.com

    It shows that the Epix doesn’t really have a truly always on display mode, as even with the always on setting selected, the screen turns completely off after a period of time (duration depends on gesture setting and screen being viewed, as outlined in the linked image)

    Curious your thoughts

    • I haven’t seen that specific sheet, but did roughly outline that above.

      It will turn off in always-on mode if there’s no movement, but I find that’s pretty rare in day to day scenarios, except for the one where you’re sitting still reading a book. But for example, sitting here typing, it doesn’t turn off (at least for me).

    • JR

      Weird. I’m finding that it’s off like 75% of the time. Wish we could change that setting. It’s driving me nuts.

  12. Andrew

    I have had the 5x sapphire and now have the 6x pro and think this series is the best adventure/ multisport watches on the planet and would have no reason to think that these latest devices would be any different. I would prefer the Epix purely for the new brighter screen. I use mine for weight training, rowing, but mostly cycling as a backup unit to my edge or karoo. Great review as always and there will always be reasons to nit pick but at the end of the day nothing out there compares.. The Apple Watch is a toy compared to Garmin units

  13. TAFB

    Ray, I am hoping that you can clarify the burn in limitations for the AOD. Garmin’s stock watch faces and some developer watch faces have an AOD that mimics the full watch face (in other words, substantially dimmer but generally the same info shown – very similar to the AOD on the current Apple Watch). In contrast, many other developers still have an older style AOD, where the AOD switches from the full watch face to a small version of the time that floats around to different positions on the screen. When I asked some developers if it would be possible to update their watch faces to the full display/dimmer version of the AOD (like the Garmin stock wf on Epix), they have said the CIQ restrictions limit the AOD mode to using less than 10% of pixels and not having the same pixel on for more than 3 minutes. It seems like Garmin and at least some developers are using some black magic to create full display AOD watch faces (albeit dimmer) that seemingly break the burn-in guidelines while others are still stuck using a gimped AOD (the bouncing, small time AOD) to avoid burn in. Somewhere in your Epix review, I recall you saying that the Venu 2/Epix have different AOD limitations than previous AMOLED watches. Are the current AOD burn-in limitations for the Venu 2 and Epix different than the 10% pixels/3 minute limit? If so, what are the new limitations?

    • Yup, so I dove into this a bit in my Connect IQ post last fall, cause it was confusing AF to me as well.

      Specifically, Garmin will now allow Venu 2 series (and EPIX) to skip the per-pixel burn detector, as long as less than 10% of the pixels are on. Garmin noted that the Venu 2 has different hardware than the Venu 1, which makes this possible without concern of burn-on on those displays.

      I asked for a bit more clarity on this, and rather than re-write everything, here’s the notable bits from Garmin’s CIQ lead, Nicholas Kral on how this differs from the original Venu:

      “The ultimate goal is to allow the user to have always-on watch faces, keep high battery life, and protect the lifetime of the AMOLED display.

      With [the original] Venu, when a watch face went into always on mode we change the watch face update rate to once-a-minute and have two rules:

      You can only have 10% of the total pixels enabled (not black)
      You can only have a pixel on for up to four minutes
      If the developer violates one of those rules at runtime we turn off always on mode, and we provide tools in our SDK to validate a Venu watch face can meet the rules. Rule #1 is meant to maximize the amount of disabled pixels. Rule #2 is meant to prevent static elements from staying on for extended periods. What we find in practice it can be difficult to implement simple things like always on analog minute hands when even something of a single pixel width can take more than four minutes to turn off.”

      link to dcrainmaker.com

      Now – what I don’t know is the state of which 3rd party watch faces uses what right now to test that. For example, as I mentioned in the post, when I choose one of the ‘Face It’ watch faces, it immediately forces into gesture mode.

    • TAFB

      Thanks for the response, Ray. Garmin’s guidance here does not seem correct. The 10% pixel limitation does not appear to apply. The “full” AOD watch faces seem to have more than 10% of the pixels enabled in the “dim” AOD mode. Is it a 10% brightness limitation? That would seem to make more sense based on visual observations.

    • Hmm, I’m not sure then. I can loop back to him/them and see what may have changed in the last few months between initial announcement and production.

  14. Jeff

    Thanks so much for all of your insightful work!
    How do the Fenix 7 and the Epix screens compare (especially for readability) when working out at night/predawn darkness?

    • Epix wins, because the backlight/display is crispier and brighter (at defaults). You could increase the backlight on Fenix to counter that, but I’d say readability is still easier on Epix.

    • ekutter

      A really common method is to draw a black checkerboard mask over the screen after you’ve done all your other drawing. This instantly cuts the number of pixels you ever have turned on in half. To avoid having the same pixels on for more than 3 minutes, you just shift the mask every minute. You can easily use a custom font to create the mask.

      The end effect is a 50% reduction in brightness.

      This won’t help if you have a WF that normally turns on more than 20% of the pixels. So a white background won’t cut it. It also could look bad if you have a lot of 1 pixel thin diagonal lines.

    • jww

      As I understand AMOLED displays do not have backlights. Rather each individual pixel has the ability to turn on/off.

      Creates blacker blacks for contrast, and also should have battery saving benefits since the black pixels are “off”.

      Must be the reason Epix data screens are default black versus Fenix default white.

  15. Dave

    I’ve owned a 645 music for years. It’s done great. I’ve learned I can’t replace this old weakened battery and must buy another watch which also does not have a replacement battery. Not sure I will continue to play garmin’s game.

  16. red five

    for pete’s sake man…increase the font size of your website. I need a g-d magnifying glass to read it

  17. Olof

    Have you compared the difference in battery capacity, when using Pulse Ox in – 24/7 mode? Under a hike? Night only?

    • Using Pulse Ox on any Garmin watch is akin to setting your battery on-fire. If you do it at least, it’s not as horrible, but is still probably going to cut your battery down by 15-25% or so (I haven’t measured it precisely).

      I wouldn’t use Pulse Ox though except either in sleep or day to day manual checks. For one, it’s useless with movement. So the act of turning on the red sensor and failing to get a reading is only going to burn battery without any benefit. And second, even if it manages to succeed, it’s unlikely to be accurate with movement.

    • N Y

      Does the pulse ox provide the Garmin sleep assessment with any relevant data? If not, I’ll probably turn it off for the battery benefits.

  18. Volker

    Btw: I would like to have a 1,4 Epix with F7x flashlight!

    • Inversely…I’d like to have a 1.2 Epix with a Flashlight!

    • ReHMn

      I would like to have at least one Forerunner model with a rectangular-shaped display… A 910XT and 920XT owner with an Omega Seamaster dress watch, so you can imagine how useless is for me the wannabe everyday watch (Fenix & Epix) fitted into a sports watch…

  19. Scott Triff

    I’d be interested in battery life with headphones playing music off the watch and navigating a course.
    I do this often, and on the 6X Pro notice it juices the battery a fair bit.

    • I’d say it’s safe to basically just use the music line-item there on the battery charts, and then remove perhaps 5-10%. Music is your main blowtorch there, so once you throw that on, everything else is gonna pale in comparison.

  20. Matt

    Still on the fence about the epix or fenix as I worry it will another “test” the market watch without updates or connect iq app development.

    With your conversation with Garmin Ray, have they indicated the epix gen2 and fenix 7 will share the development pipeline and be locked together with updates.

    Also is there an easy way to see what is available on the connect iq App Store for the epix gen2 if you don’t own one yet without searching with an app/data field and checking the compatibility list?

    • They generally won’t commit to talking about codebase pipelines.

      But everything we know about this specific group (looking at nearly a decade of products from them), and everything we know about this product, says they’ll remain in lockstep.

      The Outdoors team that’s over Fenix/Epix has done lockstep releases for almost every iteration. It’s why when the Fenix firmware goes out, so does Quatix, Tactix, Marq, etc on the same day for the same versions… In the case of the Fenix 7 and Epix, they share the same firmware levels at present, and I expect that’ll continue.

      I’d say Garmin has made it very clear that AMOLED is their future here. And I suspect 2022 will be the year of AMOLED at Garmin. So unlike watches like the FR945 LTE or the Venu 2 Plus which were demonstrator watches, Epix isn’t a demonstrator to me since AMOLED was demonstrated on Venu years ago, and it shares the same base as Fenix 7.

      I’m not aware of an obvious way to see which apps are listed as compatible for a watch you don’t have yet. :-/

    • Nighthawk700

      “is there an easy way to see what is available on the connect iq App Store for the epix gen2…”

      Do you mean like this? link to apps.garmin.com

  21. amico_pl

    Hi Ray,
    Thank for very detailed side by side and earlier in-depth reviews! Great as usual!

    I wonder what your thoughts are about AMOLED to be used in the future Forerunner 9×5?

    While I love my wife’s Venu 2 screen and I really care about map clarity, I cannot see myself with the Epix weight on my wrist. My current 945 is right size and right weight.

    • Thanks!

      I see no scenario where most future Garmin Forerunner watches aren’t at least offered in AMOLED, if not entirely AMOLED. I could see a split for the next iterations of two options, and then after that it’s all over for MIPS except in rare watches.

    • Timby

      Yeah, the weight is a bit more than I’m used to; I have an FR745 and an FR935, and am used to the lightweight plastic rather than the metal (despite some of the Epix 2 encorporating plastic as well). I wonder if the metal is just for show, but not necessary, given the toughness of the plastic.

      I ordered an Epix 2 and it just arrived today. I tested it on my wrist, and it’s definitely noticable – a great big chunk on my wrist. I’m not sure if I’ll keep it – I like my sports watches to be unobtrusive, and wonder if it would move around on my wrist during activity unless I winch it down really tightly.

  22. Volker

    The pins of the 7x are (user) removable. Seems that the Epix pins are not (user) removable? A lot of people tried in already on Epix without success. Have you already tried it/ informations about that? Or perhaps can you ask Garmin for clarification? Thanks

    • Yeah, I’ve asked for clarification, as it’s not consistent.

      My Epix/7S/7X are non-removable, but my 7 is removable. So not sure what’s up there. Hoping to hear back shortly on what the deal is.

    • Volker

      Hi Ray,
      any news on this?

    • Albert

      So after reading a post on reddit on someone successfully removing the pin, I decided to order the $10 tool from Amazon, and after following the instructions (prying on the pin section, then holding down the bar to keep the pressure on the pin and preventing it from going back into the watch hole), I was able to pop out the two pins and use the bands that I have gathered from over the last couple of years for my Fenix 6 Pro.

  23. Mathieu

    Nice comparison Ray! Although one mistyping in 8.
    “But a safe average of an hour a week here in December.” I think that should be a day instead a week.

  24. Gareth

    Hi Ray,

    great work as always! I’m seriously considering between the Epix and the Fenix 7X, both sapphire. I am coming from an Apple watch, wanting the upgrade in sports functionality and battery life! I had a 5X years ago, but sent it back because of the shocking readability of the screen and the cumbersome navigation by button when not actually in a sport tracking mode. I have held off of late because the accuracy issues in Fenix 6 series HR and GPS sensors made it seem silly to switch.

    The touchscreen addition and the better sensor hardware has me looking at this again a lot! My question is, I’m not a hardcore endurance athlete. I do trail run, mountain bike, but also gym, traditional and adventurous sports. With all that in mind what do you recommend? Stick with Apple Watch (not too bothered by smart watch features), or go Epix or Fenix 7X? Has the screen improved enough over the 5X to not be an issue? The battery life is hugely appealing and I’m with you; the flashlight looks very handy! The battery life really appeals, but so does the AMOLED screen in the Epix! Which of the two will you use more now that you’ve tried them both?

    • i’ve done many IM’s, Marathons, Trails etc. i am going for Epix 2.
      1st of all, if you do i.e. IM, EPIX will do the job.
      2nd if you do ultra trail 100km – it will do the job.
      3rd if you go mountain expedition, i.e. 3-6 weeks , the you will charge it anyway :]

      so i guess it is only the thing if you want or not want to save 100-200 EUR :)

      Epix 2 is a must :) Fenix 7 is a alternative :)

    • Edwin

      Solar recharging would be an advantage on any multi-week adventure. But I guess the EPIX could do well as long as the screen is mostly off.

    • Joller

      But try and run a 100miler, or UTMB… and Epix may run out of juice, unless you’re really fast

    • Yup, for UTMB I’d probably go with the Fenix 7, or, be willing to carry a small lipstick battery charger (which wouldn’t be ideal).

      Of course, the number of people doing 30hr+ Ultras is reasonably small in comparison to total purchasers of Fenix 7/Epix units (my guess is 1% or less). So, more choices for everyone.

    • well you would do UTMB etc. once a year :) or once a two year :) but Epix Screen is on your hand everyday ;) so i guess its better to have everyday nice thing and charge or dont use always on screen during UTMB :) so still EPIX is winning :)

    • Yaroslav

      Also, on an ultra like UTMB you are almost guaranteed to make at least a 20-30 minute pit stop at your drop bag or crew station. These watches charge rather quickly, so the boost you can get in that time will likely be sufficient to finish the race.

      (I run ultras so this is also top of mind for me; still vacillating between Fenix and Epix exactly for this reason, and thinking out loud.)

  25. Barry Eman

    These watches are amazing… but still loving my 920xt… looking forward to the coming forerunner maybe…

  26. Dimi

    A few shorts questions.

    – Is it possible to play with settings on epix2 with phone also during activity in progress? (data fields etc.) Is it possible to import route during an activity?
    – Is epix 2 slower to Fenix7 when rendering maps because of higher resolution?
    – I saw that you got pretty good results with altimeter readings. Is this data from predefined route or is it actual altimeter (pressure/GPS) reading.

    Thanks

  27. Dimi

    I will rewrite my questions here :)

    – Is it possible to play with settings on epix2 with phone also during activity in progress? (data fields etc.) Is it possible to import route during an activity?
    – Is epix 2 slower to Fenix7 when rendering maps because of higher resolution?
    – I saw that you got pretty good results with altimeter readings. Is this data from predefined route or is it actual altimeter (pressure/GPS) reading.

    Thanks

  28. Jens

    Great comparison, thanks. Now I just wonder if I should wait (and wait, and wait..) for the FR 955 or just stop waiting and get the Epix 🤔

  29. thomaek

    Thanks for this fantastic comparison as well as the reviews.

    A few weeks ago I was sure I was going to buy the F7 but following your review have change my mind and it’s now going to be Epix. I don’t really need any of the Sapphire stuff and would rather save £100 but the only colour choice available for the non-sapphire Epix looks terrible in my opinion. What are the odds that they release a different version in the next few week/months (in the UK)?

  30. Armando Serafini

    As an owner of a Garmin Forerunner 645, I have given up on seeing an updated version due to changes within the Garmin lineup especially with adding more features to lower end models. The possibility I most excited to see is an updated Garmin Forerunner 245 with even more advanced features added and the addition or option of an AMOLED screen.

  31. Tom Kaufman

    So roughly 900+ comments in just five days across all your Fenix/Epix posts — a new record for immediate interest?

  32. Scott

    Thanks for the in depth reviews/discussions. I think your understanding of battery life is great.. as is the font on the website!

    I’m looking at the epix as an upgrade from a 735XT. I’m fine with the battery life from the 735 and have appreciated the smaller size. As someone with a similar size preference, are you comfortable with the larger and heavier epix for your main watch now?

  33. Björn

    Hi!
    For us, older with reading glasses (that is obviously left home when out jogging) is epic2 a better option than Fenix 7x? The Fenix display is slightly larger but epic has a better display and higher resolution.
    I have now a really old Fenix 3 and have some problems seeing some smaller parts on data fields. What should I go with?

  34. Carl Venter

    Epic comparison, thanks. Keep doing what you are doing. I walked past you once at MWC and still kicking myself for not saying hello at that time.

    How much of a delay is there with the screen when lifting the device? That’s a very big deal for me. I used to hate the delay on the Apple Watch. And what’s the delay like on Always on vs Gesture?

    The button ‘shoulders’ also a very big deal for those of us who wear gloves. Gloves always push the button and stop the activity. I have lost countless activities due to my glove stopping the activity.

    • Ahh bummer! MWC, those were the days! Warmth and sun in February (and…people)!

      You don’t notice the delay in Epix with always-on, because it’s going from dim to bright. So at dim, it’s still readable, thus, as you raise you’re wrist, your eyes already see the time/etc instantly, and then it becomes fully-on by time the wrist turn is there. In my video I actually show it for both always-on and gesture. In that case it’s from a desk – so actually slightly harder to detect than while standing (because there’s less time).

      Good point on gloves and the button guards helping. it’s funny, inversely, someone said it’d be harder to press start/stop, but I haven’t seen that in my glove usage (with MTB gloves). Plus, you only press stop/start once at the beginning/end anyway – so even if it was hard (which isn’t not), I think that’s a fair compromise.

  35. Meng

    Hi Ray, is the sapphire crystal on the Epix 2 very reflective and hard to see in sunlight?

    • No, not to me. I’ve seen some comments about reflections here and there on Reddit, but it’s not been something that’s bothered me in real life (or that I even notice).

      Of course, as one that has to deal with reflections constantly every day while taking photos – maybe I’ve just gotten null to it. But it didn’t stand out in any way.

  36. John

    On the Fenix 6, I found that sapphire glass is more like half the visibility of gorilla glass in certain conditions. I wish I could just measure this instead of making claims, but my impression was that it’s about twice as reflective. So, depending on the angle of the screen and what’s being reflected, the sapphire glass can REALLY wash out the image due to high reflectivity. I assume it’s more more an issue on a dim screen like the Fenix than something like the Epix, but I find it a frustrating factor, and I do not consider the sapphire glass a premium feature. I’d put it in the “con” column actually. So it’s annoying that the most desirable SKU (slate grey) is sapphire only.

  37. Smul

    Any idea if there is still only 200 course points available? During a long trail run I blow through those almost immediately because a “turn” is triggered with every curve of the trail. If a course figure 8’s or something weird later on, there is no way to know I’m off course. Chevrons along the course line would be great. It won’t say I’m off course because I’m still following the course line in the wrong direction.

  38. Blake

    Not sure if you’ve seen this (or if this is common, for that matter), but this website completely ripped you off for some reason:

    [Link removed]

    • Ugh. Thanks. It’s a never-ending battle. You know it’s a garbage site when they prominently list a DMCA button at the top. Thanks for the heads up!

      (Also, I’m going to remove your link above, simply to not give them more traffic).

  39. Jeremy

    Hi,
    thanks for this gigantic job!
    One thing , a bit off-topic, strikes me about the battery consumption graph during your ride: the karoo battery drainage and projected battery life.
    I’ve always heard it was THE bad thing about it, that getting 12h was already a good thing…But here, it drains quite little battery, have a pojected running time far superior to the edge 830 (which is marketed as….what, 20h+ ? )
    Do you have any explanation on this…or maybe the Karoo now offers a decent battery life?

    Anyway, its nice to see that real life battery seems to exceed manufacturer claims…usually it’s the other way round…

    • Yeah, in this case, the Karoo backlight was turned down a fair bit (super low), because I had intended on turning on screen recording for a different video and then forgot (and once you start, you can’t turn it on). In screen recording it doesn’t change the brightness recorded. That said, it was still plenty visible this day given the lighting.

      Meanwhile, the Edge inversely, I think actually may had the stupid backlight on the entire time. It wasn’t really a big concern for me either way as those devices were just along for the ride, and I needed to be able to take photos of it easily for something else.

      Said differently, ensuring all those bike computer units were even from a battery testing standpoint wasn’t on my list that day. Dealing with the other wearables, ensuring those bike computers did the right things related to mapping/climbing, and managing gummy bear consumption was. :)

    • Jeremy

      Thanks for the details. My post was absolutely unrelated to your article, and even was not intended to talk about a comparison between battery usage. It was more of “hey, the K2 might not be as juice-hungry as I’ve read”…But anyway, thanks for the details
      (and gummy bears rule the world of athletes nutrition, obviously)

  40. Itai

    Ray thank you very much for the awsome reviews!
    I read all three reviews (Fenix 7, Epix and this one) and you really helped me to choose the Epix.
    I got it a few days ago and I must say, it’s a real game changer! My eyes are not as they used to be (I have reading glasses No. 1) and with the Fenix 6 I couldn’t read so well.. With the Emoled display it is just fantastic!

    Thanks again!

  41. Itai

    And by the way I got the stainless steel version I think its nicer

  42. BJU

    Great to read your reviews. Thanks a lot.

  43. Joan Alcover

    Under point 5, I can see that the top of the Epix screen shows the warning “Sendero Peligroso” (dangerous path) whereas the Fenix 7 screen does not show it! That alone could be a good “reason to buy” for some!

    • …the question is – is that because those people want to avoid it…or cause they *want* to find the most dangerous path? 🤣

    • Joan Alcover

      Hhhmmm! Have to think about that :) :) :)

    • Mario

      On the Fenix ​​7x this path (at 300m resolution) would be shown if the detail level was set to high instead of standard in the map settings!

    • Interesting. I’ll have to toy around with those, also interesting that the defaults are different. I suspect, as always, there’s a reason for that.

    • Mario

      I have a 6x (haven’t received my 7x yet) but I think on the Epix 2 you can see this path at 500m resolution if you set the detail level to high! But I don’t know, I don’t own any Epix.

    • Mario

      Now, on my new Fenix ​​7x small paths would be even shown at a 500m resolution if the detail level was set to high instead of standard in the map settings!

  44. Gennaro

    I’m pretty much in doubt just for the size, it’s a shame there no smaller Epix!
    I still have a Forerunner 645 – ideal size – that is the same as Fenix 7S – I had (and still have) minor issues with barometric altimeter, Garmin offered a 945 as replacement (!) and in the end I decided to live with the 645 because I preferred the smaller size.

  45. Runner

    Ray,
    Thanks as always for the great reviews and comparisons. I’ve been reading you since you were actually in DC. Here’s a comparison that I’d like to see: Venu 2 vs Epix. I’ve decided that AOMLED is the way to go, but I’m torn between these two offerings. Maybe I’m an outlier, but maybe there are many others in this camp. Obviously Epix is the more capable watch, but I’m wondering if the additional functionality is worth double the price for my use case. That’s where one of your wonderful detailed comparisons would come in so handy. Even if it isn’t one of your super in-depth comparisons, just a brief comparison would be valuable. The main differences I see are battery life (important to me), maps (nice but less important to me), and the speaker/voice assistant feature (not important to me but intriguing). I’m sure there are others I’m missing as well (e.g., I love the many activity profiles in Epix and running dynamics, but I don’t know if this are on the Venu 2). So this is a plug for that comparison. I sure would appreciate it.
    Thanks for all that you do,
    Runner

  46. Chad L

    Hi Ray,

    Thanks so much for your detailed review! I am a long time Suunto user and have been anxiously waiting for the Fenix 7 to drop so I can make the switch to the Fenix. Now I’m really torn between the 7 and the EPIX. The only thing holding me back from the EPIX is battery life. I sometimes run mountain ultras or 200+ mile races that would require recharging the EPIX on the go. Do you have any data on recharge time during use?

    Thanks!
    Chad

  47. BJU

    Yes, I see it different on my epix. I have all Europe pre loaded. In garmin Express I am able to edit and choose a certain region of Europe.

  48. Tom

    Thanks for an excellent comparison Ray – particularly interesting are you thoughts on the future death of MIPS.

    I very rarely disagree with your advice, but in this instance I went for a fenix 7 Solar….

    The battery on the Epix – although well above any prior expectations – seems like a bit of a downgrade but really for me that issue was the price jump to Epix (am I really going to get an extra $300AUD enjoyment out of that screen?? – I can almost get a whole edge 530 for that price – and recently did.). Your burn-in explanation here should stop that from being a worry for most I expect.
    I had some slight concerns about battery degradation – particularly I experienced it quite badly with my old Edge 520 after just a couple of years where it would only last 4 hours.

    Also, living in Australia, Solar might be quite useful!

    I’ve been more than happy with fenix 5 screen but perhaps if I saw an Epix in the flesh I’d soon be swayed…

    Here’s to another 5 years of MIPS!

    • IJS

      Hi Tom- I’ve just moved to Aus from the UK. Out of interest where did you manage to get your Fenix 7 from? The Garmin Aus website has delivery times of 6-8 weeks, so was wondering where else to look. I’m not yet familiar with other vendors down here.

    • Michael Brill

      Johnny Appleseed GPS are usually a good option. Pretty standard pricing but their stock is local and their aftersales support has always been good.

      They have local stores in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane and good turn around on their E-tail business.

      link to ja-gps.com.au

      Good luck tracking down what you’re looking for.

    • IJS

      Thanks Michael, they have stock! Really appreciate the help

  49. Mitch

    I would love to see a GPS comparison between the Epix base / Fenix 7 Base vs the Fenix 6 Pro. I wonder if the All Systems GPS accuracy is still better than the Fenix 6 Pro.

  50. Inigo

    Hi Ray

    Thank you for your excellent comparison.

    I’m ultrarunner with a Forerunner 945.

    Do you think it’s worth the move to the Epix model?

    If yes, which version would you recommend, the Sapphire or the Normal?

    thanks in advance

  51. C.Sco

    After a lackluster 2021 for new Garmin watches, 2022 sure is off to an impressive start!
    I’m happy to see you put up a detailed comparison article/video to compliment your individual reviews for these two watches. Great work as always!

  52. Hugo Paredes

    I’d love a fenix 7 with higher resolution. It would improve maps quite a lot and, although not as shiny, it would improve the usability.

    • C.Sco

      Me too. Even if they just improved the color depth to 10-bit (256 colors) it would be enough to make a huge difference. For one thing, it would make birdseye imagery a lot more useful. More pixels would be great too, but I long more for better color depth.

  53. Lipsey

    I’m confused with the color options of the fenix 7 sapphire solar – perhaps you could comment on this?!

    E.g. the UK website of Garmin shows (among others) these options for f7 sapphire solar:
    – carbon grey DLC titanium
    – black DLC titanium
    And I honestly cannot see a difference between these two color variants. On the German website the same color variants seem to be labelled as
    – slate grey DLC titanium
    – black DLC titanium
    And again they look very much the same to me.

    Is there really a relevant difference between these two darker color options? Did Garmin mix up the fotos on their website? Which variants are you (Ray) using for your tests/videos? It doesn’t seem to be one of the version of either the UK or German site.

    • C.Sco

      They are quite different in person, Garmin’s photos are just terrible for some reason. The black is VERY black. The Carbon grey is more of a silvery gray, what I’d call a sort of gunmetal type color. Similar to the Fenix 6 sapphire/DLC color but a shade lighter than that.

    • Scott

      That’s interesting.
      Germans Garmin site for the Epix has Carbon Slate. While Australia has “Black”

      Like to know if these are the same models, as I prefer not so black look. Found a German video that shows the Epix and love the bezel, hoping this is the same model / look in Australia.

      link to youtube.com

    • Lipsey

      Thx for your view on this!

      Are you aware of any fotos/ videos / links that show the difference of these variants in roughly realistic light??(garmins Website doesn’t)?

    • Had I gone to CES, my plan was to literally shoot the entire range in one photo shot (I did that back for the Fenix 5 I think). But alas, no CES for me.

      I’m not aware of anything with all of them in one non-CGI photo.

    • Lipsey

      Hi Ray, thx for responding!
      A photo with the whole lineup would be the ultimate thing in this regard, agreed … but a much more modest thing would already help quite a bit: could you please indicate which color-variants you’ve been using for your tests (the fenix-variants shown in your videos and photos)?

  54. Carlos B

    What about the strength and durability of the epix? Is it identical to the Fénix? I mean, Epix also passes the Military Standard 810G Testing Standard 810G as Fénix does??

  55. Hugo

    Hello Ray,

    About the difference in detail for the map, his is usually encoded in a TYP file. So my guess is that if you take some of the TYP files (the map theme files) from the Epic file system and put them in say a Fenix 6 or 7, you would get the same display. Is this something you could find time to try?
    Thanks

    • Elian T

      I suspect the map files are identical and it’s at the resolution/drawing level of the device where the changes show but it would be a good test nevertheless.

    • The map files are identical (Garmin confirmed that), it’s simply that each unit is able to draw added details from the higher resolution levels. Within the video I show this side by side.

    • Smul

      Hi Ray, I’m curious what the default detail level is on the Epix vs the fenix. There was an earlier comment about switching the level to high on the fenix to get detail comparable to the Epix. What does the Epix look like with detail set to high or is it already? Have you had a chance to play around with this?

  56. Dave

    Ray, thanks as always for the superb work. I went with the 7X Sapphire Solar – while the OLED was definitely compelling, and the battery life almost certainly sufficient for my needs (up to a 100km or thereabouts), I really wanted the reassurance of the sapphire. One thing I’d love to see if you get a chance, is a demo of the touch screen used in maps, to select and navigate to a point.

    • C.Sco

      I believe Epix also has a sapphire option, no?

    • Scott

      Yes, the Epix has a Sapphire version..

      Of note, I’ve had my 6X Pro Solar (Which is not Sapphire) For two years, mounted on my MTB handlebars and Do lots of Trail running,
      Screen is in perfect condition.
      So I agree with Ray in him stating the differences aren’t that much between the two…
      I have found though the non Sapphire glass is a lot less reflective.

  57. Oscar

    Thanks a lot for your efforts and review. And thanks for being honest about the multiband aspect. Since V800 I have not found anything similar by far and my new Polar Grit X Pro (that I am returning) shows poor accuracy, for the price it has. I am glad to see Garmin has realised the Sony antenna is not a good choice and move in other direction. I am crossing fingers and see if I can get a good sucessor in the future (and also elegant). Have a good one !

  58. Carlton

    For the Sapphire Edition, the article states:
    “B) Gets you titanium bezel/case: The Sapphire units have a Titanium bezel and case”

    Does it actually have a Titanium case? I thought it was a plastic case on both the Fenix and Epix, with a Titanium front bezel and back cover.

  59. Nikolay Konovski

    Maybe a stupid question but can I use a Fenix 7 default watch face (the black one that like to Fenix 6 face) on Epix watch?

    Or do the epix and fenix 7 share the same default watch faces ( default I mean provided by Garmin)

    Thanks

  60. Rob

    Thank you for the comparison between Fenix and Epix!

    A question about music. You wrote: “ For this first one, a 7hr 15min ride, I’ve got always-on display enabled, multi-band satellites enabled, optical heart rate enabled, course/route following/navigation loaded and enabled, ClimbPro enabled, an ANT+ power meter connected, Bluetooth connectivity to my phone enabled with LiveTrack enabled. In other words, literally everything is turned on at the highest possible settings to burn as much battery as possible.”

    But not really everything, because music / Spotify was not turned on. I noticed my Fenix 5plus uses a lot of power when I listen to music. Do you have any idea what it wil do for the Epix?

    • Yup, all wearables burn through battery like a blowtorch with music playing, and the Fenix 7 series is no different. It’s how I kill batteries when I want to get it drained down.

      There’s a music battery chart above though, and in my casual testing of it, it seems about right in terms of battery burn.

  61. Emmanuel Auger

    Bonjour
    J’aimerais savoir si la montre Epix possède l’application pour le kitesurf ? J’ai lu dans un article que la montre fenix 7 avait cette application . Sincèrement je sais pas laquelle prendre entre les deux . Si je comprend bien , c’est la qualité de l’image qui a une grosse différence n’est ce pas ?
    Au plaisir d’avoir de vos nouvelles
    Ps: je suis extrêmement actif : course – marathon- velo- natation – ski de fond – kitesurf – activité de plein air – randonnée – kayak- chasse au petit et gros gibier .. et mon métier , policier

  62. PeterD

    Hello Ray,

    Your youtube comparison of Epix 2 and Fenix 7 made me reconsider my original plan to go for 7x (upgrade from 5 plus) in favor of Epix 2. Especially your comments on how more redable the display of Epix 2 is even outdoors.

    One of my many use cases for Epix 2 would be to attach it to bike handlebars while riding a bike.
    My question is, how does the Always On During Activity settings behave in such a configuration (watches not on the wrist, but on somthing, which is still shaking a bit). Will the display really stay on, or will I have to tap on the display/press the button every time I want to check datascreens?

    Thanks!
    Peter

  63. Jared

    Do you think Garmin is going to update the MARQ series with an OLED screen and all the new features?

  64. Ron

    Great write-ups as always. I would love to know how much time it takes each of these devices to fully charge up from a similar state, using a similar charging block. Any big difference here?

    I like the longer battery life, because.. well, less charging. I also imagine hypothetically this means less frequency charging cycles, and I’m assuming longer battery / device lifetime.

    As a bonus, depending on the charging time / frequency, the device is not off my wrist as often or as long. Always my gripe with Apple Watch (daily charging, forgetting it, missing, missing a couple of hours of data.. I know, I know, first world problems.)

  65. bsb

    Hello Ray/anyone else,
    I just changed from the 6 to F7 and immediately upon did just a running and walking activity to check out certain features. The one thing I noticed right away was that the INTENSITY minutes didn’t count.

    Quick google search seems to have this being an issue with numerous Garmins but nobody really has a solution.
    Any suggestions welcome! Thanks!

  66. Mike

    So when will we see an EPIX X Plus (so I can use all of my size 26 bands I have for my Fenix 5X Plus?

    • Jonathan

      Thank you for the comprehensive comparison!
      I am wondering whether there are any differences in the activity profiles (eg. the Forerunner does not support mountaineering) supported by the Fenix 7 compared to the Epix 2. Likewise, do both models provide daily training suggestions for running, cycling, and indoor cycling? Thank you!

  67. Kev

    This is why I love Rays reviews.

    It’s clear from the above that he absolutely prefers the Epix but his review is honest and detailed enough that I know that I would prefer the Fenix.

    Great work.

  68. Mike Mc

    For the past year I was eagerly awaiting the F7 announcement so I could replace my aging F5X. My focus changed upon seeing Ray’s detailed reports on the F7 and the Epix, and based on those reviews I decided to go for the Epix. So far my first impressions are extremely favorable. The clarity and detail provided by the AMOLED display is a huge game changer for me (older with deteriorating eyesight). I use the mapping screens quite a bit on outdoor adventures and the maps are much more useful with the level of detail provided by the AMOLED screen. I have my display set for gesture based activation and it works very well. I did a 3 hour mountain snowshoe trip yesterday in 20F temps and the activity used about 6% of the battery. “Out of the box” the battery capacity should be more than capable for any activity I use it for. The big unknowns will be how the capacity trends with age and the potential for screen burn-in (which I’m hoping to minimize via keeping it in gesture mode). After spending a couple of days with the AMOLED display, it would be VERY hard to go back to using the MIPS display. YMMV

    The touch screen works very well and I appreciate the fact that it can be turned off in activity mode. My last experience with a touch screen watch was the Forerunner 405 (hard to believe that was over 12 years ago) and I detested the touch screen on that watch.

    My only disappointment so far (which would apply to the F7 as well) is that it has the same power connector that was introduced with the F5, which I’ve never been a fan of. I’ve lost track of how many times I had to replace the power cord on my F5.

    • Paul S.

      Get one or more of the charging pucks that Ray did a review of a while ago. Then you won’t worry about the Garmin supplied charging cord. I don’t even know offhand where the cord for my 5+ is; I always just use one of my pucks.

  69. froggyranita

    Hello, when it comes to navigation, is there a noticeable difference in the viewing comfort between the 7X and the Epix as the later has a smaller screen size?
    Thanks

  70. Göran

    Hi Ray,

    Great review as always, thanks for giving food for thoughts in my purchase decision.
    I will go for the Epix because it will most probably suit my needs best.

    Just one small thing that puzzels me. On Garmins websites it clearly states that the F7 with Sapphire and Solar have a DLC coating on the bezel. Epix on the other hand has no information on that in the name of the watch it only says so in the specifications Sapphire Edition: carbon gray DLC titanium or pure titanium. Do you know for sure if the black Epix Sapphire Solar really has a DLC coating on the bezel?

    Keep up the good work.

    With thanks in advance,

    //Göran

  71. Nathan

    To me it came down to the display and I chose the Epix over the Fenix. Can’t say I’m unhappy but still wondering what the 7X would have been like. I can’t imagine that viewing them side by side in a shop would have made the choice any easier. I think you’d need to be using them for real to compare them properly if you were making the decision based on the display.

    I do have a question about the AOD. If AOD was on, would the battery drain be the same if you had one of those busy watch faces with a million fields compared to a watch face with just minute and hour hands?

    • The busier watch faces do generally drain the battery more across both Fenix & Epix lineups. However, how much they drain will really depend.

      One thing to keep in mind is that right now, many watch faces won’t “qualify” for AOD on Epix/Venu 2 Plus and will get stuffed back into Gesture mode, at least until developers ensure that they meet the CIQ rules for those devices.

  72. Jared

    Is anyone using a Fenix for running and a Wahoo on the bike? If so how annoying is to get rides into Garmin connect? Do the rides count towards daily activity etc. shown on the watch?

  73. Julio

    Thanks for the review.
    Please, could somebody confirm that the display is ALWAYS ON when during a workout?
    Or does it dimm at any time during the workout ?
    Cheers

  74. Katie P

    How does the Epix compare to the Suunto 7?

    • They’re largely different beasts. The Suunto 7 is a Wear OS watch that has the Suunto app, and has some sport tracking capabilities, as well as navigation/map capabilities. In terms of mapping/navigation, it’s reasonably good. However, the deeper sports tracking capabilities are limited compared to Suunto’s other units in that it doesn’t support things like sensors or multisport workouts. The other limitation of the Suunto 7 is simply battery life. In default modes, you’re looking at about 4-6hrs of GPS time if doing navigation (like a hike), based on my testing. You can improve that a little bit to the 8-10hr range if you start turning off features, but it’s kinda a silly trade-off. And daily battery life you’re looking at 1-1.5 days.

      Inversely though, the Suunto 7 has more smartwatch features than Garmin, depending on what platform you’re on. As a Wear OS watch, there’s far more mainstream apps that you can download to it. You can also download things like YouTube Music, as well as Google’ contactless payments.

      Said a different way, the Epix is a really deep watch for sports/navigation, that has some general smarts if it aligns to your platforms (e.g. Spotify for music, and your bank is supported). Whereas inversely, the Suunto 7 is a deeper smartwatch, that has some sports/navigation basics.

  75. Eric Buxton

    My 7X sapphire arrived yesterday to replace my 5X. The screen is much better and my main reason to get the 7X vs Epix was battery life-my 5X was down to less than a week of usable time if I used GPS at all and I hope the solar help is helpful overall. Loving the upgrades in features so far.

  76. theSweatyBetsy

    Ray you are truly the best – thanks for all you do, this was a great comparison and I will definitely use your link to buy (probably from REI). Every time I read reviews not on this site, I notice errors and comparisons that don’t make sense – thank you for your accuracy!! I am commenting in hopes you can put in a word with Garmin some time…. since I know you “know people in high places” haha. Could you do us ladies a solid sometime soon and pass along to them that us gals with small wrists are a bit tired of getting the short end of the stick!? I’d love to get an Epix, but the size simply won’t work. Yes, Garmin, ladies do use GPS watches, prefer long battery life, and fawn over beautiful screen resolution too! I say it laughingly, but it sucks to read about all the features that are not available in”petite”. I understand it is hard to achieve this in smaller size, but they could reflect that in the cost – – I’ll be shelling out a whopping $900 for a Fenix 7S Sapphire Solar, and even with Solar it still won’t get me as much battery life as the non-solar Fenix 7 which is only $700 (77% of the cost of the Fenix 7S). Very annoying!

    • Hi Besty!

      I agree, and I suspect we’ll see other sized units. For as many people that want an ‘S’ sized AMOLED unit, there are equally as many that want an ‘X’ one.

      I honestly don’t see any scenario that doesn’t end with Garmin either making Epix the AMOLED line with three sized units, or Fenix gets AMOLED with the three sizes. It’s purely a matter of time. The challenge is whether that time is this summer, next summer, or some other months of the year. Not sure.

  77. Brian

    Can you see the Epix screen in bright sun while wearing polarized sunglasses? Because I can’t see my iPhone AMOLED screen. I always have to tip up my Oakleys to read the screen. Not a problem with my vivoactive 4.

    • Unfortunately, I don’t have any polarized glasses. I wasn’t sure if the glasses I was wearing were considered polarized or not, but according to Rapha’s site they aren’t. They have a “polarized-like” effect/coating, but aren’t specifically polarized.

      That said, practically speaking, maybe that coating works the same. Sorry!

    • Brian

      Thanks. This might be something to look into for us considering a purchase. I have an iPhone 11 and I looked up the display type and it says “Liquid Retina HD display”. So I’m not sure how comparable that is to AMOLED. However, I’m in a state that is bright sun all the time. And when I’m out at a football or baseball game or even driving in my car on super bright days, I can’t see my iPhone screen with my polarized Oakley’s on when sun is reflecting off it. I have to take the glasses off. So I imagine that would cause some problems for cyclist and runners out here. But perhaps the Garmin AMOLED is not the same as this iPhone screen.

    • Radek

      Actually it is more complex problem. I used to have Sony Xperia Compact phone in the past and with my polarized glasses on, I did not see display on this phone. When I rotate it horizontally than it was ok. With the same glasses on Samsung it is ok, both vertical or horizontal way, but if I rotate the phone diagonall than it is worse. What I want to say it is the polarized filter main funciton. Polarized filter release light waves in specific way (directing the light waves or I can say it is filtering all but only one direction of light waves)… It can do it horizontally, vertically or in some kind of diagonall way. If your phone for example has some kind of filter (polarazing the light waves) in the screen and it direct the light ways horizontally and after it your glasse receive the light waves in horizontal direct but has vertical polarized filter, it simply completely cancel the light waves and nothing goes through. I have polarized glasses and I see the AMOLED display on the Venu 2 without any troubles. I guess it will be the same on Epix. But I am not sure how is the fpolarized filter setup on your glasses. May be simplest way is to change the glasses.
      link to en.wikipedia.org

  78. Reader

    Is this site censored? I can’t find any discussion about LTE and calling and that is something that would surely appear in the questions/comments. Garmin failed to bring this highly anticipated feature to its top watches and now you pretend that nobody cares?

    • Because this is a comparison between two units and how they differ, not a comparison between mythical features and units that don’t exist. As such, there’s no reason to say “Neither unit contains a burrito smothered in cheese, but man, I wish I had a burrito.”

      Meanwhile, if you read the linked reviews, I talk at length about the odd gap that exists around LTE on both these units.

      Alternatively, you can just post comments like yours. I only censor comments that post someone’s personal information, or, where someone is a dick. While yours is close to the dick-line, I think it resides more on the stupidity camp, thus, I’m letting it stand for now. Happy Sunday!

    • Brian

      Hey Ray. I think this poster got you so worked up you missed my question right before this :). The one about readability of AMOLED screen in bright sunlight while wearing polarized glasses. I saw you are even wearing some in your profile picture (can’t tell if yours are polarized or not).

  79. Dex

    I wonder how much validity and practical value remain in measures like stamina and body battery that are derived from several model-based estimations. Each of these has own estimation errors that further accumulate in the derived measures.

    • Paul S.

      I wonder what’s the point? If Body Battery or Stamina tell you something in line with what you feel, then having an external device tell you what you already know is kind of pointless. If Body Battery tells you “you feel lousy” when you feel great, you’ll ignore it. My devices (5+, 830) give a “Recovery Time”, which I always ignore. If the 8×0 that I replace my 830 with has Stamina, that’s fine, but it’s not why I’m going to buy it, and I’ll probably pay it zero attention. If Stamina replaces something useful (“in order to give you the wonderful Stamina metric, we’re getting rid of ClimbPro”) then no thank you.

    • Brian

      I wonder how Whoop metrics compare since there whole marketing is recovery metrics.

    • I think while similar, they’re quite a bit different – which also impacts value.

      As Paul noted, Body Battery isn’t likely to directly cause you to change your ways. However, it will cause Garmin’s own workout suggestion algorithms to change (including recovery), and thus, for folks listening to those, it’s important. I do find body battery reasonably close most times to reality. And I find when the Garmin platform flags a day to skip a workout with it’s warning-message, then it’s almost always correct.

      As for Stamina, it’s early days. I’m not seeing a ton of validity for shorter-form things, like intervals. I mean, it seems like the data is roughly in line, but really only at very high intensities.

      However, I’ll give it credit that on my 7hr ride, it was pretty close to reality. So if you’re looking in the most valuable aspect, which is longer-term sustainability of your efforts for many hours, then I could likely look at this and be in the ballpark. And for a 6-10hr event, you’re just aiming to be within a 10-15 minute window of viability. Whereas if it came back and said I’ll be 50KM short on a 100KM race, then yeah, I’d probably re-think things mid-race (especially if it had historically been accurate).

      Like any other tool from shoes to nutrition, you practice ahead of race-day to see how well it works for you as an athlete.

  80. Daniel T

    hello, detailed as always, many thanks and really appreciate your work.

    I’m wondering: in terms of CPU/processing power, are there any differences? does the Epix 2 have a better CPU? did you feel any difference in speed e.g. when zooming in/out from maps or trying to use routing? and on that note, did the routing feature evolve/change at all?

    On the battery side I do agree with some comments that battery degradation is an issue one should think about when purchasing st in the 2-3 yr frame. For long multi-day hikes with camping, outdoor stuff etc. the Fenix 7 has a legit advantage. Epix looks pretty and has an appeal but for me, the only real functional advantage there is the better visibility of the maps, the rest I consider fanciness :) still a tough choice.

    • No difference there in terms of responsiveness in maps or such. I actually show it in the video, side by side. The CIQ benchmark scores show virtually identical values as well.

      No changes in routing at this point that I’ve seen or otherwise been made aware of, save for the graphical-related changes and the ‘Up Ahead’ Features discussed (which, I actually think are pretty useful).

  81. Maybe a weird question but if I paired this with an hrm pro, would I be able to use the strap as my daily hr/steps and get things like body battery and just wear the Fenix/Epic at night for sleep tracking? I prefer to wear my nice watches over a smart watch but I really find the body battery to be something I get a lot of value out of.

  82. Koen Hoogstoel

    Hello,
    Thank you for the outstanding review and Fenix vs Epix reviews. One question: you mention you did a review of both Saphire versions but the Epix does only have black or silver/white bezel. Maybe you have used the steel version of the Epix?
    I waited to switch from. Marq adventurer to an Epix and chose the silver/white Saphire version. Too bad Garmin did not make a silver Saphire version without the white borders. But overall: very happy with the Amoled display. What a relief. My Apple Watch is now put aside.

    • I used the Black Titanium Sapphire edition of the Epix (there’s also a White Titanium), and it’s what you see throughout this review. The Fenix 7 units I used were also Sapphire.

      Cheers!

  83. Peter Z.

    Great review. Just wish you’d been as clear in the Fenix 6 review about lack of need for Sapphire. I got convinced by retail store to step up to Sapphire instead of base Pro and now 2 months later the DLC bezel coating has multiple scratches. All from very basic daily wear, nothing extreme like rock climbing or whatever and with it mostly covered by coats here in Michigan for the 2 months. Garmin just says that’s normal.

    I feel like maybe manufacturing process for coatings is inconsistent or something, since on forums some people have great experience and others have problems like mine.

    • Brian

      Does Fenix 7 Saphire have the same issue? I’ve been struggling with decision between AMOLED or more Battery life with only a $100 difference between sapphire editions. However, if we’re saying Fenix 7 non-Saphire is as good or better quality product than saphire edition, that’s a $200 difference and might make my decision easier between Epix and Fenix 7. (FYI, I don’t like silver casing and grey bands so the regular editions of any of these models are not up for consideration).

    • Carlton

      I think that are basically two types of people: those that care about the DLC getting scratches, and those who don’t and perhaps even prefer the patina of a well-worn watch.

      The Diamond-Like Coating isn’t all that diamond-like. I wouldn’t buy any watch with it because it will start to scratch off more and more over time. To be clear, any bare-metal bezel will scratch, but it’s not nearly as apparent because the scratches are the same color as the surrounding metal.

      I’ve had non-sapphire Garmin watches. They don’t scratch nearly as easily as the DLC finish, but they do scratch. And a scratch on the screen is even more annoying than on the bezel.

      A sapphire crystal and a non-coated metal bezel are both required to get decent durability.

    • Eric Buxton

      My 5x survived a face planting bike wreck with the sapphire intact though the raised metal now looks battle worn. I now have a 7x and like the larger screen and touch

    • Peter Z.

      Yeah, live and learn I guess. I got caught up a bit in excitement of new watch. My Vivoactive 3 never had screen scratches so I should have thought of that and definitely the scuffs on silver bezel didn’t stand out way when dark coating over silver is scratched.

    • Brian

      I see what you all are talking about now. I didn’t know what the DLC was before. Makes sense now.

  84. James

    Hi Ray and team DCR,

    I currently rock a Fenix 6 Pro Solar, and I’m trying to justify the Epix 2 to myself. The screen I get, but I’m not sure it stacks up to the price for the Epix in isolation. Anyone want to make the case for the rest? Cheers, J.

  85. Bob

    I’m curious about the ruggedness of the Fenix 7 Sapphire crystal vs Epix mineral crystal glass ruggedness. I understand the Sapphire crystal is one of the hardest substances on earth and will not likely shatter or scratch. I’m concerned that day-to-day bumps on the Epix glass will be scratched and possibly shatter.
    Do you have thoughts on face ruggedness? Thanks

    • Peter Z.

      Ray specifically states in the review that he sees little benefit in Sapphire for screen scratching. Also, the Epix has a Sapphire option if you’re extra concerned. One point – from my reading on sapphire glass after buying the Fenix 6 with it, seems shatter resistance isn’t much different than other material.

      Anyhow, Ray’s comment:
      A) Gets you Sapphire glass: This is more durable against scratches, but also has slightly dimmer visibility. In 2022, I wouldn’t overthink the scratch element, the glass they use on the regular non-sapphire units is very strong and I rarely scratch watches with it, despite treating them like crap.

    • Bob

      Thanks Peter for sharing this info on Garmin glass durability.

  86. Dom

    Thanks Ray for this detailed comparison!
    Is it possible to use my own custom maps instead of TopoActive? I have raster maps (GeoTiff) and vector maps of my country. Can I use any of them with either Fenix 7 or Epix? (I don’t mind if I have to do some file conversion or hacky workarounds)

  87. Jesal

    Does anyone know how long it takes to charge either the Fenix 7 or Epix 2?

    I was thinking about if I went on a weeklong backpacking trip and brought a portable battery pack/charger, how long would it actually take to recharge either watch.

    • BJU

      I guess there would not be a need to charge the Fenix 7 during your trip. My Epix 2 needs approximately one hour for a full recharge. But I charge not with a portable battery pack.

    • 1hr 45 mins to 90%, and then another 45 mins till fully charged.

      I have a silly-long and detailed post and video I need to wrap up on this quirky deep-dive. I went down a rabbit hole I shouldn’t have, though, it is pretty fascinating.

    • Ronald Brandtjen

      Hi Ray,

      Garmin Epix: Very good and interesting review.
      There is only one little problem: You speak as fast as you run and bike.
      If you spoke a bit slower it would be much easier for all the non-US and non-English people to fully understand you.

      Thank you

      Ronald
      Wiesbaden, Germany

    • Jesal Patel

      Thanks for the info. I look forward seeing the rabbit hole deep dive video!

  88. bsb

    Hey Ray,
    Why do all the Fenix series watches (solar and non solar), but I will use non solar as the example, have a substantial increase in expedition mode battery life, but the Epix drops in expedition mode? Is this an error, or? Thanks!

    7s – 11 days UP to 26 days
    7 – 18 days UP to 40 days
    7X – 28 days UP to 62

    EPIX – 16 days gesture mode DOWN to 14 days in gesture expedition.

  89. bsb

    Hey Ray,

    Sorry for another question, this one regarding Solar charging.

    So when you go to the Solar Widget, and click the little info tab it states ‘Lux hours are the accumulation of solar intensity throughout your day’.
    Now let’s say that number 102k LX hours, as in your Fenix 7 video @ 13:38 mark.

    There is also the ‘magic 50,000 number’, does this mean in your 102 k video shot, it would be 102/50 so 2.04 or 2.04 out of the 3 hours they use as the ‘out in the sun calculation’ to extend battery life from 28 days to 37 days.

    Hope you’re following, sorry!

    I am not trying to complicate it, but I guess essentially, is it 150k LX multiplied by 28 days (4.2 million LX) to give you those additional 9 days of battery life to get you to 37 days of battery life for F7X or is what is showing in the widget (102k LX in your video) something completely different?

    Lastly, since you are in touch with them – recommendation to put approx. battery life ‘earned’ by solar today/last week/ last 30 days would be amazing!

    Thanks in advance!

  90. Mark

    That image showing Epix 2 and Fenix 7 side by side showing the custom watch face created using face it, of the beach, difficult to tell but the Fenix 7 looks more than 64 colors.
    The developer website lists the Fenix 7 as being a 256 color MIPS screen now.
    link to developer.garmin.com

  91. Guilherme

    Hi Ray,

    First of all, thanks for the great work you do! I’ve being lurking here for a very long time and you helped me to make an informed decision on numerous occasions .

    A post about battery replacement, cost AND availability would be fantastic!!! This is in line with a more sustainable planet and companies should be able to provide batteries for otherwise perfect functioning devices. I have the Ambit 3 Peak and I still love the watch, but after 8 years and more then a thousand activities battery life is becoming a problem (it can hardly past the 10 hour mark with GPS). I’ve been trying to buy a new battery for a while, but there is not an easy way of doing it (actually I can’t find a way of doing it!). Suunto probably wants me to buy new watch instead of keeping mine, but I really dislike the idea of a throw away society. 30 years ago a piece of equipment like the Ambit was spacetech and now we are happy to buy a new one every year or two. What I like about the Ambit is the stout built and high quality of the hardware. Also, back in the day a Suunto watch was supposed to last forever (or at least a really long time) and be a tool and not a disposable fashion statement. That’s what I loved about Suunto and unfortunately I think this is gone. My Ambit might be the very last built to last watch that Suunto produced. The Ambit still have all I need to be able to do my adventures safely and take me home if I have trouble finding my way back, but battery life is lacking and it’s bothering me a lot. I do multiday hikes and cycle trips and battery life is key. If it get’s to the point that I can’t change my Ambit battery I will take my business to Garmin and buy one their Solar watches. I’m very interested in what they will do with the next Instinct. My wife has one and battery life is fantastic on her watch. Going Solar in the near future is a no brainer to me…

    Anyway, a very long post to say that a battery replacement blogpost from you could do a lot to influence the industry in a good direction and generate less waste!

    Cheers

    • Antti from Suunto

      Battery change for Suunto watches is available globally at all of Suunto’s authorized sports watch service centers. Either contact Suunto using an online service request (where available) or contact your local service center directly. Both options are here: link to suunto.com

      The cost varies from region and partner to another as well as depending, if it includes freight or not, taxation etc. It is also difficult to give out an exact cost estimate in advance, before the watch is inspected by a technician. So, start by contacting Suunto. Expanding the lifetime of your watch is definitely smart and also good for the environment.

    • Nice, good to know!

  92. Craig Schaepe

    I replaced the battery on my Garmin Fenix 5 and was surprised how cheap and easy it was. The battery was $16 and with a small torx screwdriver it was basically a 15min job. 4 torx screws and the back plate comes off. Pry the battery off the back plate and unplug from the center board, plug new battery in and screw back plate on, done!. Ebay/AIExpress have all sorts of parts and batteries and there are videos online. I expect the Fenix 6 and 7 are equally easy to replace the battery

  93. AKH

    Great review as usual. Thank you.

    It is really strange that the Epix 2 is not coming in the same sizes as the Fenix series. I have the Fenix 6s and while I’m tempted to get the Epix 2 due to the display, touch etc., I think it is too big with a diameter of 47 mm. For my wrist 42 mm fits perfectly and while 5 mm more doesn’t sound a lot, It really is.

  94. Volker

    Hi Ray,

    do the Bontrager Flare RT & Ion 200 RT work with F7 series and Epix (can I connect them as sensors/lights)?Thanks!

    • Hi Volker!

      Yup, Fenix 7 and Epix both support the ANT+ bike lights, which the Bontrager Flare RT series are (inclusive of Ion).

      Looks like I need to add in some of the sport/sensor tables from my Instinct comparison to this one to make it a little easier to see some of that. link to dcrainmaker.com

      Cheers and thanks for being a DCR Supporter!

  95. Patrik Boström

    Nice review! I am pondering a purchase of either the epix or the fenix. Leaning towards Epix because main use will be back country navigation. In the areas I often move, there are no trails or marked paths. Previously (on garmin handheld) I have found Birdseye satellite images to be sometimes useful. Have you tried using those on either watch? As I gather they are not officially supported for some reason, even though earlier Fenix models were. Seems to me like it would be a perfect match with the Epix display.
    FYI, I can only access first page of comment section. Maybe a problem on my end, but have tried both phone and mac.
    Thanks!

    • I haven’t tried/poked into the satellite imagery thing. But it’s reasonably high on my list to understand if that’s just a backlog to enable item on someone’s desk at Garmin (e.g. checking a box listing Epix as compatible), or something else.

  96. Eric

    If the Epix had the same flashlight functionality as the 7X, it would be a no-brainer for me. However, since that’s not an option at the moment, I’ll just sit here unable to make up my mind.

  97. Michael V

    This was a great review and appreciated you didn’t go into every fenix feature. Agree with your summary and any insight into dropping the epix screen into the marq line?

  98. Luis

    Thank you for your awesome Epix/Fenix 7 comparative with so many details that I have not found in any other article. Good jub

  99. Davyd

    Question about the exact meaning of this, “On the Fenix 7 (middle unit), you can display 6 data fields per page, but the Epix can display 8 data fields per page”.

    Does this mean that the Fenix 7s cannot display 6 data fields per page, or that the 7X can display more?

    Thanks

    Davyd/

  100. Irene Roche

    Sorry if this has been asked, but… what would The Girl buy? The Epix looks to me like a bulky very male watch for big hands…

    • She’s still wearing her Fenix 5s (non-Plus). Though, she is tempted with the Fenix 7S (but not the one I pictured above, she wants a different color – specifically the “Cream Gold Titanium with Light Sand Band”).

      However, she wants to see it in person. Once stock become commonplace, we’ll find somewhere to check it out in person. She’s *very* particular about the color, and given the plethora of other watches at her disposal, none have received the green light.

  101. hook

    I understand that fitness watches are never as accurate as a chest heart monitor. I have worn FitBits for quite a while & decided to go with the Fenix 6 a couple of years ago. I was extremely disappointed in the calorie count on the Fenix 6. The Fitbit was much closer to the chest heart monitor I would wear when working out. Is the ca;orie count better on the Epix?

  102. Graham

    Well I just bought the Epix Gen 2 cause I think the screen is better for me. I’m off to Everest Base camp in 2 weeks so fingers crossed I’ve made the right decision on the Epix! Thanks for great content.

    • HarriK

      After I introduced the Epix 2 wrist gesture and night mode the battery life increased to 16 days. It’s enough for me.

  103. Mario

    Hello Ray,

    In one of your comparison images, the forest on the Fenix ​​7X is brown and not green.
    (on my Fenix 7X all of my woods are brown.)
    Have you noticed that?

    Many greetings, Mario

  104. Hi Ray,
    I’m a Forerunner user since years (910, 920xt, 935) and considering switching to Epix for multisport and triathlon use. The last 2 years my 935 is crap for open water swimming (was great until approx Automn 2019 and all previous Forerunner were pretty accurate). How is Epix in having accurate open water distance?
    Cheers
    Philip

  105. CJ

    Anyone have any hands on experience with both that could sway me one way or the other? I currently wear the 945 as my running watch and everyday wear. I cycle and do triathlons, nothing over a half-ironman, so multiple days of GPS are not necessary. The screen looks pretty amazing on the Epix, but how is it for an exercise watch? No one stocks these around me, so actually trying them on is not an option. Obviously there are going to be people in both camps, but any insightful information would be greatly appreciated.

    • Ccr

      I had a 6 Sapphire Titanium before, and was pretty determined to go with a Fenix again. But when I put the 7 Sapphire Solar next to an Epix, it was simply no longer an option to not choose the Epix. There is no going back to MIPS once you have enjoyed the AMOLED display.
      There might be reasons to go with a Fenix, mainly if you need/prefer the X model or prefer the smaller S model. But if you do not “need” the Fenix, than Epix is the way to go.

    • CJ

      I appreciate the reply. I ended up finding the Epix 2 for $120 off so went ahead and ordered it. The AMOLED display was definitely the deciding factor

  106. Clay

    Thanks so much for your reviews they are amazing. I’ll definitely click your links when buying. Question about gesture mode. Does it also work in the Fenix 7 sapphire solar to give it a boost like it does to epix series? I ski your a lot and was out with a guide who has a f6 and he said brightness was never an issue for him… Except that sometimes it’s too bright at night. Makes me wonder if I really would want the epix considering the hit to battery life. I wonder if the f7 might get like a 50% boost to battery life with gesture mode on (if it even has it). Sorry if I missed it and you already covered this.

  107. Timby

    So I ordered the new Epix, but something I wondered (and have often wondered in the past) – does Garmin ever produce the same model device but with differing internal parts, depending on part availability, sourcing, or fixing issues they discovered after release of the initial hardware?

    I ask, because sometimes I buy a device when it is new (like this one), but wonder, “Should I have waited until the product has been in the wild for, oh, 6 months, so they can fix any bugs in the hardware and start producing units with updated hardware?”

    Do you know if this is something Garmin actually does? Or do they do such good testing of their hardware that they never have to do this?

    – Tim

  108. JASON S LANE

    Great detailed comparison as always. One question I have is do you think the Sapphire edition is worth the extra money for backpacking? Does one really need a military grade GPS. Durability and weight aside, is it worth th extra coil for multi-band GPS?

  109. Alyssa

    Thanks for the review!

    Ordered a Fenix 7 from Garmin on 22 January and got disgusted waiting for it – hadn’t shipped by Saturday (2 days ago) and Garmin said it might be another 3-4 weeks. So, no. Canceled and ordered an Epix 2 from Crutchfield (I know!) and it shipped Monday :)

    I think the Epix is the way to go, thanks for your reviews!

    • Harza

      I agreed. Epix 2 with OLED display is the future. And my nattery last about 16 days.

    • Harza

      Sorry for the typo. Battery

    • Bugblatter

      Hi DC Rainmaker,
      I know I am late to the game, but du you have any comparisons for under wartet display performance?
      Pool and or outdoor swimming?
      How does the f7 display compare to the Epix during swim workouts?
      I gladly await your answer, Bigblatter

  110. Marko

    Hi Ray, first of all, great review/comparison, as always :)

    I have a question regarding battery life on Epix. I did a 5 hour ride yesterday and lost about 60% of battery. Today it was similar, 4 hours, about 40%. I’m using it mounted on the handlebars, external HR connected, AOD (1/3 brightness), route/course loaded. Software on the watch is 7.35.

    It looks like I get about 10% discharge per hour, and that’s nowhere near your experience of about 5%/hr. I don’t need 20 hour battery, but I was counting on it lasting for about 15ish hours for my 200 and 300 km bike rides.
    Do you think that this battery usage is “faulty” and should I probably return it?

  111. Antoine De Groote

    Thanks to your (and other) reviews, I opted for the Epix instead of the Fenix 7, coming from a Fenix 6 Pro.
    The quality is a noticeable step up, especially the vibration, which is a huge improvement over the previous generation.

    The first impression of the Epix was however less favorable than I expected. I mean, it’s great, especially the resolution is just AWESOME. But, I also kind of miss the transflective display of the Fenix 6.
    It would be tough to go back to the Fenix, because that resolution is so great. Mostly one doesn’t really need it, but having a HR graph inside an activity display, is really really great.

    BUT! Personally, I don’t really need 65.000 colors. Also, the whit-on-black text during activity is less nice that the opposite, and especially the auto-dimming can be annoying at times. I also don’t really need the vibrancy of the colors.

    Therefore my question: is it technologically possible to have a transflective display with a higher resolution, e.g. similar to that of the AMOLED display? If that were the case, that would be the ideal solution for me.
    Maybe you have some insight on that Ray?

    N.B. The optical HR sensor is so far less accurate than on my Fenix 6. Especially on the indoor trainer, it is WAY off (Iike by +/-30bpm), weirdly.

    • Antoine De Groote

      Update: I returned the Epix and got the Fenix 7Xss.
      I couldn’t be happier. As much as I tried, I couldn’t love the Epix. With the Fenix I felt “at home” right away. Abandoning the high resolution wasn’t hard at all after all. It’s amply sufficient on the Fenix screen (even for maps!). Also I prefer the discretion the Fenix provides. I don’t need people across the room to know when I get a Whatsapp message or whatever.

      Even if the core business of both watches is the same, I prefer a tool, not a toy.

      Ray, I agree with everything you write about 95-99% of the time, and I’m thankful for your positive impact on the industry and the resulting gains for all of us.
      But this time, I disagree with your opinion that Garmin killed the Fenix line with the Epix. I’m really not seeing that. As you said, it will be interesting what will happen in the next 2-5 years.

  112. Patterson Lou

    Have you noticed the buttons on the Fenix 7 aren’t as crisp as the 6? I just received a warranty 7 sapphire solar, and the buttons are all mushy in comparison to the 6x, which depressed with a tangible click. Is it just me?

    • Eric Buxton

      My 7X sapphire does have much mushier buttons than my 5X does. Others have mentioned this as well-I also saw a pic on another watch forum of a nearly new one after it lost its lower left button. Sounds like the 6 buttons were much more reassuring.

    • Lou

      Eric,
      Thanks, I’m glad it’s not just me. Garmin sent me a replacement because one button was so mushy. It arrived today and ALL of the buttons on the new 7 are mushy. I’m probably going to send the new one back. I’m disappointed.

  113. Stu

    I’m trying to decide between an epix and fenix 7, both sapphire versions.

    Anyone got real world battery times when using always on with mapping following a gpx? Normal gps, how long would both last?

    • The battery charts included are pretty real-world, as they’re out navigating, following a route file with the navigation screen on the majority of the time.

    • bsb

      Hey Ray,
      Is there a battery drain from the flashlight itself, as in, how much does it suck out of the watch if it’s on? Also, what is the expected life of the lights themselves?

      Cheers

  114. Henning Svane

    Something I have not seen mention in any test, is it cannot be used for pool swimming. It simply cannot count and even worse it cannot display or save the results. It has been a problem since release and has not been fixed yet. It is strange as it is not a problem for Fenix 7 which should be the same?? also it is ustable and reboots, and can have diffucult with sleep data and therefore body battery numbers. when moved from a perfect Fenix 6 this feels like a beta software. Beta 8.18 which a Release candidate for the next version has still all these problems. Garmin have tried for almost 3 month to fix it and has not done it yet. I will be happy if some one have any news when this will be fixed.

  115. Eric Buxton

    This could be the patent the merges the two…
    link to techradar.com

  116. PJT

    Hi there,

    I’ve used your reviews over many years to help with choice of various bits of fitness tech and every time you’ve been spot on – thanks.

    Reading this article I am in a very similar position to you (“the downside for me is that I typically prefer a smaller/lighter watch”) which is why the Fenix 6s works well for me because fits under wetsuit when surfing etc, comfortable to sleep with it on etc. I’ve seen the Epix2 and as you say the screen is awesome but I just can’t get comfortable with the size.

    Do you have any thoughts on why Garmin didn’t release an Epix 2s given that they’ve already got the right sized screen in the Venu 2s?

  117. Kyle

    With the sensors on the watch, is there an update to the calorie counting algorithm? I read the 2010 posting with the calculation methods. Any updates? I have a Fenix 3HR and am considering an upgrade because I am suspicious of the HR input to the calorie counting algorithm. For some workouts (strength), the calorie’s burned registers as low but I want to eat so much more than after a long hard cardio work which shows a higher calorie burn. This is really important to me as I’ve lost a lot of weight over the last 2.5 years and use the watch to provide feedback on calorie budget. Thanks.

  118. Michael

    Great review which made me buy the Epix 2

    Strange question: in the first video at 5:58, you seem to some kind of protective cloth / wrist warmer or something like this. Can you tell what exactly this is?

    Many thanks
    Michael

    • Hahaha

      It’s simply a black sock that I cut in short sections. I use it to hide watches that are unreleased if out on trails/etc and someone comes by. Or, if I need to film/shoot something unrelated that might be released before a watch is announced.

      If I’m wearing a coat/sleeves/etc, then nobody sees unreleased watches. But if I’m wearing short sleeves, this helps. This shot was over a month before the Fenix 7/Epix came out, and thus, wanted to hide it.

      Cheers!

    • Mike

      Good day.
      Looked through your good review but can’t choose the watch even after it.
      I decided to try garmin watch and bought Vivoactive4, but completely disappointed with battery life, which is important for me.
      It says 8 days in smart mode, but really it is only 2.
      That is why I am thinking, 28 days of fenix and 6 days of epix are real, or also fake?
      I do running 6-10km per day, like to monitor health parameters and like to listen to music.
      Wanted to have a good garmin watch, but still confused with my choice.
      MIP displays used in fenix are good only under direct sunlight and it’s truth.
      If there id no light, no data available in good reading at your display.
      AMOLED is nice, but 6 days are not enough.

      Can you give some suggestions for me?
      And please, people who are reading this comment, advise how long your battery really lasts on your epix 2 and fenix 7 watch in real everyday usage.

      If possible with screenshots.
      Thanks

  119. CaWa

    Hi,

    I am thinking about upgrading my Garmin 235 and buying a 255, 955, Fenix 7 or Epix 2. I would like to have a watch that I can use for swimming (besides running and cycling). I understand that the 255 and 955 have a water resistance of 5 ATM. The Fenix and Epix 10 ATM.

    From the Garmin site I understand that 5 ATM should be sufficient for swimming. However, there are other watch sites that claim 5 ATM is not sufficient for swimming:

    „If we are going to be accurate with real world applications, then this means that anything below 10atm shouldn’t be worn in the water to play it safe. There are actually some general guidelines that you can follow in regards to a watch’s ATM rating.
    3-5 ATM: Can withstand splashes of water, rain, and maybe even showering, but shouldn’t be fully submerged in water.
    10 ATM: Can handle swimming, snorkeling, and maybe even scuba diving.“

    So that would mean to be safe I should get the Fenix or Epix with 10 ATM.

    Could you please help me here?
    What are your experiences?
    Probably 5 ATM are still easily enough for my purposes…

    Thanks a lot

  120. Harry VOWELL

    Thank you for this review!

    Very comprehensive and has given me a clear answer on which one will fit my needs :)

    Keep up the good work 👏🍺🙏🏼

  121. Chris

    How long do they both take to charge up ?

  122. Damien Rocchi

    Great review with

  123. Larry

    Just got my Epix yesterday. Quite the upgrade from the Fenix 3.

    Do have a couple questions…
    1. If you do an activity (lets say cycling) and you have the watch HR operating at the same time that your wearing an external band (Polar OH1+ for me), will the external one take preference over the watch HR sensor? I know you can turn off the internal one, but that also seems to void other metrics from being calculated and included in your overall metrics.

    I do wish you could specify internal HR on/off on an activity basis. In winter I’ll wear this over a jacket while Nordic skiing and will always wear the Polar OH1+. I suppose if the sensor doesn’t see any heart rate on a jacket it will hopefully turn itself off, but a direct setting would be nice.

    2. Have others found the vibration a bit on the weak side. Did a bike ride today and Varia radar displayed, but the warning vibration seemed very weak.

  124. Kevin S

    Nobody should be surprised or upset a 5 year old watch has no stamina. Using AOD just by itself is likely to reduce battery longevity 60-70% based on the specs. This is the reason I haven’t bought a device like this. The tech for me is not worth the expense since it is quite obvious battery longevity will be shorter than I want for 2-3 more gens. I know it’s just me, but I’ll “lug” my phone along (yes I smile when people say a modern laptop or phone is heavy). Garmin providing good replacement service/options is an entirely different matter. Entirely resolvable in 2 seconds. A flat 2 pin battery connector is entirely feasible. Include a new seal, overcharge people $50 a kit, done.

    If you haven’t tuned out yet… and ignoring software bugs which seem to be common…
    The battery chemistry used has a maximum of 500 full cycles to 80% capacity. Some of you may use 2 cycles some days, others consistently a 1 cycle a month. Degradation is a relatively straightforward process as are the ways to have better longevity. It’s all about trade-offs. If you set watch for maximum features (ie maximum drain) and always drain the battery to less than 20% you may notice serious issues at 18 months or less.

    Most recent tech is much better not causing battery loss at “full” charge, it’s still best to disconnect between 90-99%. It is also much better to charge when the device is off, but this is really not practical, so charging with the least drain you can manage is helpful. A bigger battery will always have better longevity than a smaller battery.

  125. Ivan

    Anybody having issues with HR on EPIX during night (sleep monitor)?
    My heart rate is doubled on Epix than on other devices, and only during I sleep.
    HR on apple watch around 50-60 bpm, on epix at same time 110-120 bpm.
    During day everything is fine.

  126. Ryan

    I’m a tiny bit away from buying a epix sapphire, it’s been in my cart multiple times now. My hesitation? I really want the Marq Adventurer, but I want Amoled screen! Do you have any insight into this as possibility? I don’t want to buy the epix only to find out a few weeks later they release a Marq wit Amoled. I know price wise it’s quite a bit more, which I’m ok with on the basis of the case and design of the marq. But, I can’t buy a flagship product with a non flagship screen. If I knew that the marq isn’t in the amoled mix, I would buy the epix right now…

    Any ideas here – I’d love to hear your thoughts.

    • Carlton

      Ray never posts about products until they are released, so you’ll just have to wait for the official release date…whenever that is. I’m also waiting for the new Marq because I dislike plastic watches.

      New Garmin Marq watches are probably coming this year, based on a leaked warranty card showing a full 2022 product line (including new Marq watches except the Driver version.) They probably will have AMOLED. We’ll probably find out in the next couple of months. But no guarantees. If you can wait, then do. If you need a new watch now, don’t wait.

    • Mike

      I’ve been waiting …….. and waiting …… on an EPIX + that’s larger (51 mm) to fit my current set of bands. I’d get either a (new) EPIX or (new) Marq w/ amoled at this point if it took 51 mm bands.

      Leaning EPIX b/c I use it heavily multisport but guess the Marq could be used for that.

  127. Andreas

    To me charging the watch is a drain(pun intended).

    I end up forgetting it to do it and then I have to charge it before getting to work etc… I’d rather have something I need to charge once or twice a month at most, than taking it off every week to charge it.

  128. Clayton Jones

    Is there a way to force the Epix to keep the display updating even when relatively motionless? I found that the best feature of my previous Fenix models was that first and foremost they behave as a watch. Which for me at least means that they always have a second hand ticking. I find that most of the time when I look down at my new Epix watch it is in low power mode. I don’t mind that the display is dimmed, but the fact that the seconds counter goes away kind of drives me nuts. Maybe it just requires a different setting that I haven’t found yet?

  129. r.gad

    I listened very carefully, and followed all the details, and in my opinion you greatly underestimated the visibility of the epix gen 2 in the sun. I bought the watch and it is really amazing, but problematic in the sun and I work in the field. In short, from your experience you knew it and did not emphasize how much of a problem it is in the sun.
    The watch in the sun is difficult to see, and it is wrong of you not to emphasize the problems in the sun.

    • Brian

      Somewhere on this thread I called this out way back in February when I first watched the review. It was before I made my decision to buy a Fenix 7 I asked DC if it was hard to see the epix in the sun and with polarized sunglasses on because I can’t read my iPhone OLED screen in bright sun. DCR gave kind of a non-answer but I ultimately went with F7 due to battery life and have been very happy with my choice.

    • Mike

      Hi Brian
      Which model of F7 you have, what’s your regular activity and how long your battery lasts?
      I am using VA4 now and very unsatisfied with 2-3 days of battery life.
      Display at the sun is very good.
      But when there is no sun it’s quite difficult to read it.

      So I am thinking Epix2 or Fenix7, both are same, only display and batterylife are the most different.

      Thanks.

    • Brian

      F7 Sapphire Solar and I couldn’t imagine having anything with less battery than this. I have always on display on, all gnss + multi satellite, data updating every 1 second (some of settings for best GPS) and I’m training for an Ironman so 8-12 hours a week using running, bike or swimming activities. The only thing I turned off to save battery was pulse ox because it’s a useless stat. Seems like I am still charging once a week’ish. I don’t think an Epix battery could make it thru one weekend of my training. BTW, all Fenix 7 are $100 off I just saw yesterday.

    • Matt

      I briefly had an epix2, winter sun and polarised sunglasses I had no problem reading when walking, running or just sitting watching tv. All of our eyes are different so it’s not a surprise some will say it’s perfectly fine and others not and everywhere in between.

      For example despite needing a very high prescription in my glasses I have no problem reading my fenix6s with the brightness on the lowest setting of 5% and I have friends with good eyesight and do t wear glasses who need the fenix6 with 70% backlight to read the screen clearly.

    • Mike

      Your F7 has MIP type display, which is always on by default.
      You can swith the backlight on or off only :).

      Tell me about solar charging, does it really helpful to charge the battery?

    • Mike

      Why briefly and what did you switch to?
      I have been following this for …….EVER trying to decide between EPIX and Fenix 7.

    • Lou

      I used my 7x solar for a few months. I ride a bike a couple hours/day and often do hikes up to 6 hours. The battery life on the 7x is outstanding. I’m not sure solar makes a huge difference, though. I recently got an Epix2. The difference in screen visibility is remarkable, as is the difference in map detail. The map is far more functional with the Epix screen. So far, I’ve needed to charge the Epix weekly, which isn’t a big deal. It charges pretty quickly, so it isn’t inconvenient. The 6x is a big watch, and I was often banging it against doorways and counters (with no damage to the watch). The Epix feels less big, and doesn’t feel “in the way “ like the Fenix does. Both watches are amazing tools, and I wish I had either when I was racing, as the metrics one can capture are useful. The biggest question (for me, anyway) is which is more important: screen resolution or battery life? I originally intended to sell my Fenix if I liked the Epix, but may save it for longer backpacking trips, etc. I hope this may help someone who is on the fence.

    • Matt

      There was a hardware fault with the buttons, so reverted back to my fenix6s pro. By time it was back in stock and the button issue lots of us were reporting stopped being reported I figured I might as well wait for a few more months and get it for a discount in the Black Friday slightly discounted sales.

      I know I can get 15% of now but as it’s so expensive I will see if I can get more off and if there is an epix2 a or epix3s in the pipeline I would prefer that. Or wait for the rumoured 265/965 to drop

    • “The watch in the sun is difficult to see, and it is wrong of you not to emphasize the problems in the sun.”

      Except, it’s not.

      As others have pointed out, and by now, hundreds of thousands of people have bought Gamrin Epix units, and used them in the sun all summer, and in sunny places not in the summer – and nobody is complaining about it. It’s just not an issue for the vast majority of people.

      I suspect if you were having an issue, it could be:

      A) Your settings are wrong somehow (accidentally or otherwise), and it’s in a lower-visibility mode
      B) Your eyesight is different than most other people

      Again, it’s been almost a year now, and from a display visibility standpoint, people are almost universally happy with the Epix. So coming along and saying it’s entirely unreadable just doesn’t hold water with a year’s worth of reality. Including me using it in bright sunny places, directly next to both the Fenix 7 and other watches, and having no issues at all.

  130. Cameron

    Ray, I am torn between purchasing either the Epix (gen 2) or Fenix 7 Sapphire Solar – Epix has an awesome screen but battery life is very limited compared to the Fenix 7 (not X). I originally considered the Enduro 2, but after trying the watch on it is just too big and bulky. However, I really liked the NextFork feature on the Enduro 2. Unfortunately it is not available on either the Epix or Fenix 7. Do you happen to know if the NextFork feature will be added to either the Epix or Fenix 7 via a software/firmware upgrade?

    Thank you!!!
    Cameron

    • Mike

      Hi Cameron,
      What is the next fork feature?
      Can you describe?

      Can someone show the picture with difference of the saphire and gorilla glass of F7.
      Some users said that it’s more difficult to see the data with saphire screen.
      Wanted just to compare.

    • Cameron

      Mike, look at the review of the Enduro 2. The Next Fork feature will display the next trail intersections, points of interest, or trail markers along the trail or route that you are travelling on. It does not require a course to be loaded.

      See description and screenshots for Next Fork here:

      link to dcrainmaker.com.

      Cameron

    • Andrew M

      I’m in a similar dilemna, however at some point you have to make a call, otherwise you’ll always be waiting for N+1 to arrive.

      Personally, my decision is coming down to the memory on the Australian SKU for the Fenix 7 Solar Sapphire vs the Epix2 Sapphire, being 16GB vs 32GB, and will I miss the extra 16GB if I get the Fenix.

      Coming from a Fenix 6 Sapphire, which I got a warranty refund on due to battery life being down to 2 days within 2 years

    • Mike

      Hi Andrew,

      I noticed that many people are complaining battery life of fenix 6 and fenix 7.

      I am also unsatisfied with battery of my VA4.

      Instead of claiming lots of battery life days, garmin should improve their quality.
      You spend a lot for brand new wrist watch to have a problem after 2 years, that is not an expectation.

    • And, just to confirm, Next Fork is in the Fenix 7/Epix update that goes live here shortly. You can download the public beta already, or…probably just wait a few days and it’ll be in the production firmware update.

    • AJ

      Simple question do both watches also have basic daily step counter option for main wat h face display?

    • Carlton

      Yes. Both watches have fully configurable watch faces that can display step counts.

  131. Andrew M

    Can someone please check how much storage the Australian maps use on the Fenix 7 / Epix 2?

    I’m not overly bothered by which screen, given I’m coming from a Fenix 6 Sapphire (32GB), but a little more worried about the available memory on the watch once a few maps are loaded up.

    I’d check myself, only my Fenix 6 has already gone back, and just received retailer credits for it today.

  132. NutzRSalty

    My cycle buddy has an 5x since 2018 and it just rarely ever need to be charged. One 100mile rides I always struggle with smart fines devices dying and having to fudge my cadence and pace. I bought and 6x and it a thing of the past took on hikes and beat the crap out of it.

    The next best thing about it is toughness. I was helping a friend install a roof rack on his rock climbing truck and I was removing the watch to do some welding…. The watch fell and I’m thinking great now I need to buy another watch….. I watch it hit the metal lift on the way down and then fall into a 6ft concrete pit where the motor and electronics for the lift live. I saw some dust and the watch was face down I was pretty sure the glass was done…

    Nope the dust was from chip the watch took out the concrete! The dlc coating had a small chip but the watch was fine. 3 years later it’s still working great.

    Long and short if your a function over form type of person and just want something that’s a tank and works this is it.

  133. Richard

    Great article c comparing Garmin lenses

  134. Jason Eastin

    EXCELLENT!

  135. Chelsea

    I just wanted to add a perspective on the note of battery life. Personally I have a challenge with remembering to charge my watch or notice how low it is, and even if I remember to, I experience challenges with taking action on it.

    I would say the longer battery for me provides more leeway to not randomly have a battery to low to do whatever activity I am doing.

    Also this doesn’t account for the drain apps and other resources in the watch may cause. I have found that my battery drains a bit more. Can’t figure out which app, and constantly forget to use process of elimination…. For the same reasons I forget to charge.

    And no the memory issue isn’t something I can just fix. But thought I’d offer another perspective.

    Thanks for the post, I REALLY want the better screen… But my primary reasons for upgrading include battery life and morning report features. Hoping garmin improves the fenix screen next generation.

  136. Sjoerd

    Almost a year ago I switched from Fenix 6 to the Epix 2. I never regretted that decision and I certainly never go back to the Fenix series.

    • Sal

      Hi,
      So this is my dilemma. I was torn between Fenix 7s sapphire solar (that’s my sweet spot size wise) and Epix2 (my eyes…just NEED a good display). The Fenix 7s fit my wrist perfectly but I’ll be using it for HIIT, MTB and running (in dark) so the Fenix 7s combination of screen brightness and size wouldn’t be practical from sports watch stand point. So I decided now for Epix2 (although size is a bit big for my taste and I really don’t like red dot on button). I’m also getting a deal for Epix2 sapphire for $800. But I’m worried now that I pay $800 for an almost 1 1/2 years old watch and in a few months they drop a + or Epix3 or Fenix8 with AMOLED. I know there’s no guarantees but is it in April 2023 still worth it to invest in Epix2 sapphire $800 or shall I rather wait, pay $200 more for new version? I’m not in a hurry but also don’t want to wait a year. Thanks

    • Mikey

      What “new version”? Did I miss something? EPIX3 what?

    • Sal

      Doesn’t have to be called Epix3 but there are articles that suggest Garmin submitted 3 models from the same series for approval that might hit the market late summer of 2023 or beginning of 2024 (pls don’t ask for source, just Google it. I read them this week so they’re online for sure). So word is either updated Fenix, or updated Epix. Mic, speaker, different sizes, torch, LTE;there’s still a lot to be done here. My perfect one still be (and I’d be happy to wait): Epix/ Fenix with Amoled, 42-45mm, 1.2-1.3 display size, max 14.5mm hight, torch (like x model, maybe a bit weaker), LTE, mic, speaker, sapphire, solar (not a must but nice), 5-7 days battery.

    • Ryan M.

      I think you are going to be waiting a long time for that wishlist.

    • Sal

      I don’t know man…I don’t know. But for now that’s nit my concern. Its rather shall I spill $800 for the Epix2 Sapphire or wait, since according to 5krunner there’s something cooking?

    • Mike

      Lol- a mic / speaker would actually cause me to NOT get an “EPIX3” …….

    • Sal

      Ok, different opinions of what we want or not. No biggie. Still not the issue why I wrote here. I’m complete Garmin novice and thus, thought of reaching out here where you guys have been not just owning but also involved in online product discussion. So, again non binding, would you say at this point in April 2023, almost 1 1/2 years after launch, it’s worth it to spend $800 for the Epix2 Sapphire or shall I rather wait for an updated Epix2 or perhaps even different sizes of Epix (would prefer a smaller version)? My eyes are not the best and I jog mostly nights so that’s why Fenix isn’t for me. I tried on the 965 but hust don’t like the style and where I live it is offered for almost $700 and Epix (until end of next week) for $800.

    • Ryan M.

      I would go for the Epix 2 Sapphire at that price. There haven’t been any concrete rumors of a new Epix, and most size releases tend to be going towards the bigger, not smaller unfortunately.

    • Sal

      Appreciate your feedback! As you probably noticed I’m just trying to justify the expenses hehe

  137. Mike Suchodolski

    How do the Fenix and Epix compare during swim workouts? Specifically wondering about the display visibility in the pool during the workout for both indoor and outdoor pools?

    • Mike Suchodolski

      I case any comes across this from google I wanted to give an update. I ended up buying the Epix and have been sooo happy!! The screen is so easy to see in the water. I wear glasses out of the pool and with no glasses and foggy goggles I can clearly see my laps.

  138. JJ

    Ray, is there a way to customize what data fields are shown during interval workouts? I hate that if I’m running distance based intervals, let’s say 12x400m with 400m recovery, that it won’t show me heart rate. Os there a way to edit these data fields? If not, has garmin ever commented on why they won’t give us this ability on our $1,000+ watches?

  139. Griff

    Great comparison! Would you consider doing the same for the Suunto Vertical vs Suunto Race?

  140. Kevin Reeve

    On the Epix Gen 2 Sapphire, there is an outer ring of numbers 5-60, is it possible to illuminate them?
    Cheers

  141. fatjoze

    This is one of the best reviews / comparisons of 2 products I’ve read online ever.
    Thanks for this. Very informative and helped to make a decision on the EPIX (mainly due to the maps detail).
    Keep up the great work

  142. Rob

    @DC Rainmaker.

    Firstly thanks, such an amazing review. Im a stickler for details and like to micro examine every last detail when buying tech. Even though most of what this watch offers I will probably never even know it exists, I just like having the option there if I need it. For me the main thing is upgrading my Fenix 5+ for better battery life, Im torn between the 7 pro solar or 7 pro sapphire solar.

    Anyway enough rambling, my question is your review shows only the 7X as having the flashlight, but Garmin UK website shows the 47mm (Fenix 7) & 51mm (7X) having a flashlight. Im wondering if its an update since your review, or just a different option for the UK market? With the detail you go into on your reviews I though maybe this may be something you have tested/got experience of.

    Thanks in advance

  143. Julie

    Hello!
    I read your review a little over two years ago and it helped me make my final Garmin decision, I appreciated your guidance. I’m late to the party, but I have a suggestion that I’m not sure was previously addressed (forgive me for not reading 300+ comments). My story: I had a Fenix 3 for just under ten years and it is still functional after heavy daily usage in multiple sports including salt water pools. I gave it to my friend to introduce them to Garmin watches while upgrading to an Epix Gen 2 thinking I would enjoy the improved display. Loved the watch; however, it is two years old and the start/stop button stopped working already. It is known issue with the watch. In an effort to be thorough, I performed the recommended warm water immersions, reboots, software changes and tried disconnecting 3rd party apps, but nothing worked. The watch was no longer under warranty, so being a curious engineer I opened the watch to see if I could fix it. It was as I suspected, a hardware problem. One of the disc springs that is supposed to contact the connector when the start/stop button engages was broken. I found one of the small contact discs floating around inside the watch. Now every design has its achilles heel, but this is a big one for a $1000 watch. Very poor design. I appreciate your detailed review and would love it more if you also included a review of internal component design/assembly to ensure robustness over time. The Epix 2 according to the forums has the ‘mushy button issue’ and to my knowledge, it is not fixed. However, looking over the design, it was a predictable weak link if only someone who tested the watch also opened it up and looked inside for thorough examination. I recognize many of the provided test watches require return and an agreement to not compromise the case, but it’s important if we wish to evaluate performance over time/reliability as ~$1000 is a big investment for most. Heavy use of glue, foil-thin cup springs for that tactile “click” you hear when pressing a button…there are simpler/more robust designs that are longer lasting for such an expensive watch. Thank you for your consideration and hope to see more of your reviews in the future with detailed internal photos and comments whenever possible.

  144. Mark Doggett

    Thanks

  145. James Baker

    Love your reviews and the details that you go into. Thanks…

  146. do better

    title the photos!! i don’t know which watch is which!!

  147. The Epix is now half of its original cost at outlets so a no bracer for me in the UK.
    The only slight downside is the physical size.