Cycling Plus

XPLOVA X5 GPS

£429 › Feature-rich GPS with a built-in video camera

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THE XPLOVA X5 is a GPS cycle computer whose unique selling points are a built-in video camera and the ability to connect to Wi-Fi and 3G networks (the latter with a SIM card) to upload footage, download routes and interact with other X5 units. The 121g X5 measures 109x59x22m­m, and resembles a smartphone with six buttons and a 3in touchscree­n that unfortunat­ely doesn’t work with gloves.

The menu structure is confusing, and what should be simple tasks are at times frustratin­g. For example, a back arrow will appear occasional­ly, but instead of taking you to the last page you were on it kicks you out of the menu entirely.

The main dashboard-style screen is nicely laid out, but if there’s an option to customise the metrics it displays we couldn’t find it. The X5 does let you choose your data fields on a second page of activity informatio­n. You can add up to five ‘training mode’ pages, which offer fancy graphs grouped by data type – ‘time mode’, ‘distance mode’ and so on. Moving between these pages, their associated menus, and navigation mode is not intuitive though.

The X5 offers full navigation powered by Open Street Maps, and it works well. You can create routes with turn-by-turn instructio­ns using Xplova’s own online platform, or import them from other services. For ride logging, the X5 uploads to Xplova’s own service, which is convenient only if you aren’t already committed to a platform like Strava or Garmin Connect. A ‘send to Strava’ function exists on the Xplova website, but it’s a clunky solution that we found unsatisfac­tory in practice, so just plug in a USB cable. The supplied out-front-style mount weighs 32g and is far too flexible. Luckily, Xplova should work with Garmin compatible mounts, so there are plenty of aftermarke­t options if you’re prepared to ignore the warning in the manual about using third party mounts.

The X5 is packaged well and we’re confident that updates could improve the interface significan­tly, but as things stand both the device and the online platform that accompany it feel rather half-baked. If filming is a priority, you’re better off with a standard GPS and a separate action camera.

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