Vetta V100A Altimiter with Percent Grade Cycling Computer

Vetta V100A Altimiter with Percent Grade Cycling Computer




The Vetta V100A altitude computer combines 21 functions with 7 different altitude functions, including readouts for total altitude gain and maximum altitude for any given ride. The display also shows the slope or percent grade up ( + ) or down ( – ) during a ride, and it can even track intermediate altitude and distance on a segment of a longer ride.

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Vetta V100AWL Altimiter with Percent Grade Wireless Cycling Computer

Vetta V100AWL Altimiter with Percent Grade Wireless Cycling Computer




The Vetta V100AWL wireless altitude computer combines 21 functions with 7 different altitude functions, including readouts for total altitude gain and maximum altitude for any given ride. The display also shows the slope or percent grade up ( + ) or down ( – ) during a ride, and it can even track intermediate altitude and distance on a segment of a longer ride.

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VDO MC1 0 Wireless Altimeter Cycle Computer

VDO MC1 0 Wireless Altimeter Cycle Computer




Designed for cyclists who want a computer that combines cycle computer functions with an altimeter, the VDO MC1.0+ keeps you informed of not only how many feet you have climbed but also the current gradient. It has a large display with oversized digits for quick reading while huffing up the hills as well as topographical data. Other features include nine altimeter functions, 13 cycle computer functions, the ability to track both front and rear wheels, and a five-year warranty.

Features

  • Easy to read three-line display
  • Current, Max Trip Altitude (meters or feet)
  • Current, Average, and Max incline in %
  • Current temperature (Celsius or Fahrenheit)
  • Trip Climb, Total Climb and Maximum altitude for all trips
  • Home Altitude Memory (auto recalibration)
  • Service interval indicator
  • Odometer for Wheel 1
  • Odometer for Wheel 2
  • Total distance (combined odometer for both wheelsets)
  • Freeze Frame function
  • Trip Distance
  • 2 Dual wheel programmable
  • Auto/Manual stopwatch
  • Average Speed, Maximum Speed, Pace Arrow
  • Handsfree auto scroll through functions
  • Trip distance
  • Total odometer
  • Elapsed ride time
  • Clock
  • One-button operation
  • Auto Start/Stop

User Ratings and Reviews

4 Stars VDO review
I purchased the VDO MC1.0+

unfortunately the first unit had a bit of a problem.

The temperature reading was about 35 degrees higher than the actual temperature.

Let me say that Bikesomewhere really rocks they issued me an RMA and within the week I had my new unit. Thanks again for making the online buying experience very pleasant.

The setup was fairly straight forward on the computer. The install guide is all done with pictures so it’s easy to follow. I will say that they need to state which is up and which is down on the sending unit that you attach to your fork. The picture stinks and if you place it upside down the computer has a hard time detecting the signal.

The initial setup of the computer is fairly straight forward once you realize there is a 3rd button on the rubber piece that says MC1.0+

My only complaint and it’s a minor one is that setting the base elevation took forever. The digits move at only 10ft at a time. My elevation here in Colorado is 6800ft so it took a long time for the computer to get up to that value.

Once I got thru the defective unit, the physical installation and the calibration it was time to take a ride and see how well it all worked.

The trip distance time all worked as any normal bicycle computer. The temperature reading is nice to have.

The altimeter the real selling point on this device is very cool. I took it out on a familiar trail and it is very easy to read. there is a readout of %grade that changes as you climb it also records your steepest climb as well as your average climb grade. This all works great.

The computer also keeps a record of how many feet you have climbed for the trip and over all.

The computer recorded that I climbed 1500 feet for my ride and looking at some of the information I have on the trail this is very close to being the actual elevation gain.

So this product seems to work as advertised. I hope that the initial quality holds up to the test of time. I will try and update this review in a years time so you can see how it’s holding up.

Just a quick update on this product. I’ve had it for about 18 months and it has worked flawlessly. It has been nice seeing my elevation gains and incline grade. I have had to replace the batteries in the unit but other than it has been free from any kind of problems.

I would recommend this to anyone looking for altimeter features in a bike computer.

One nit picky thing is that the elevation that you are at is very large in the display taking up a lot of real estate, they should make that smaller IMHO. Its not all that important to know what your elevation currently is. I’m more intrested in how much I’ve climbed or what the grade is than knowing that.

3 Stars Wireless vulnerable to other signals
I’ve started biking again, and, living in San Francisco, I wanted an altimeter to see just how much up and down I was really doing. I also use my bike to commute, and was interested in tracking the daily distance over various routes.

My daily commute includes a trip on BART, and that, unfortunately, is for me the downfall of this device. It is somehow picking up speed readings from the train. Imagine my surprise when the first day I used it, I took it out of my pocket when I got out of the station, only to discover my top speed was 69mph. I suppose I could that to impress the chicks, but I’d rather know what I’ve done on the bike. I was equally surprised though to find that on the same trip, the altimeter was accurate to about 20′ (+- 5% overall), which I think is pretty good considering I had just traveled through a tube at 69mph a couple hundred feet below sea level.

I’ll probably trade it for the wired version. I really like the convenience and cleanliness of the wireless, but the reception from the BART totally screws up my trip/total distance and average/top speed. If I weren’t taking a train every day, (Or if I could just turn it off) I’d rank it higher… It seems to perform very well under normal conditions. Controls are easy to use, the numbers are readable and the layout is clean while showing a lot of information in a small package. The only real negative for me, besides the wireless interference, is that there is has no backlight, and I’m often riding in the dark, but this is minor… I can read it ok when passing under a streetlight. Also, speed is measured in .5 increments (not tenths). I don’t mind this, but it seems to annoy some people in other reviews I’ve read.

If you’re not taking BART, (and you’re probably not), it seems to be an accurate and reliable instrument at a decent price.

4 Stars VDO MC1.0+ Works as Designed
I purchased this advanced bike computer because I live in the San Francisco Bay Area and like to know the gradients, temperature, and altitude, features only available on the more expensive models.

It does everything advertised with high accuracy. Note that because it’s wireless it can accumulate mileage when not in use, if it comes in proximity of an electronic disturbance, although it’s a rare occurrence.

The only minor quibble I have is the shiny area around the display, which glares in the bright sun, and the awkward button positions.

Overall, I think it’s the best bike computer of its class available today.

5 Stars A more precise method for determining wheel size
This is a great cyclometer. One thing I learned while setting wheel size is to use the method of marking your front tire and the floor where they meet and moving forward through one revolution and precisely marking that spot on the floor/ground where the line on the tire hits its low point. HERE’S THE TIP: make sure you’re on the bike when you try this as that pressure will change the circumference of your tire! Also, it’s important to be on a uniformly hard surface, and make your line as straight as possible. My road bike tires are listed as 700×23C, which is 2133 cm (84″). When I measured without my weight on the bike I calculated 2118 cm (83 13/32″). With my weight on the bike, it measured 2103.4 cm (82 13/16″)!

4 Stars Great Cyclometer, doesn’t do everything.
For its size, cost, and setup — this thing is great. I love this unit mainly for its barometric altimeter and nice large number display. The absolute altitude is not too useful because things flucuate with the weather. But over the course of a ride its usually stable enough to tell me a pretty accurate climbing total, which is what i’m mostly interested in. It also provides slope information to, so when you can’t go up the hill — it will tell you why. :P

Things I like:

its a basic bike computer with functions you expect, speed, distance, time, averages, etc.

Its a decent altitude measure, which is great if you train on hills. Even if you don’t know how long the road is, if you know the elevation target you can gauge how much more is left.

Things missing:

Any sort of download capacity. You can’t capture ride info to a computer or anything for recording progress. That said, if you really wanted to, you could record information in a (gasp) notebook at the end of your ride.

Its not a gps — so no tracklogs or anything.

It doesn’t do heart rate.

It does not (I *think*) have a cadence sensor hookup.

Things I don’t like:

Using the buttons and menus. Luckily I don’t want to do much with it except re-zero at the start and occasionally switch from average speed, total distance and total altitude. Setting up the unit and navigating the menus is not intuitive. But its easy enough and so far — no bike computer I’ve seen does this well.

The handlebar strap is rather frail, and the unit clips into the mount *hard* — and drains the batteries when its in the unit. So I remove it when not riding to preserve the battery which works well. The problem is it was so hard to remove, that twisting it that hard always felt like I was going to break the mount strap. I solved this by using a file to strip down the “nub” on the mount so that it clicks in easier. This basically solves this problem, and I recommend doing so — just don’t make it too loose, as you can’t easily put the plastic material back after you file it.

Bottom line:

despite its shortcomings, I really like this unit, enough that when I lost the head unit I purchased a replacement rather than getting a newer flashier gps powered device.

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VDO MC1 0 Altimeter Cycle Computer

VDO MC1 0 Altimeter Cycle Computer




The VDO MC 1.0 is the perfect tool for the enthusiastic climber featuring 9 altimeter functions and 13 cycle computer functions. The Matrix-display shows your tour-relevant topographical data plus your regular cycle computer readouts. The programmable NAVIGATOR makes following road book instructions a piece of cake. Functions: Current Speed (in Miles or Kilometers); Trip Distance; Total Odometer; Elapsed Ride Time; Clock; One Button Operation; Auto Start/Stop; Average Speed; Maximum Speed; Pace Arrow; Hands Free Auto Scroll through functions; Trip Distance 2; Dual wheel programmable; Auto/Manual Stopwatch; Odometer for Wheel 1; Odometer for Wheel 2; Freeze Frame function; Wired Version. Easy to read 3-line display; Current Altitude (m or ft); Current Temperature (C or F); Current Climb in %; Trip Climb Total; Max Altitude per Trip; Average Trip Incline; Maximum Trip Incline; Total Climb (all trips); Maximum Altitude (all trips); Home Altitude Memory (auto recalibration of home altitude); Service interval indicator.

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars best altimiter computer I’ve tried
I love the MC 1.0 it works great on two bikes (you need another mount but they’re cheap since it’s not wireless). The display is a little small at first, but you quickly get used to where to look for what data and then you’re so glad it shows so much all at the same time. I’ve never had a problem with it not recording a ride (unlike with wireless computers) and having the temperature always displayed is especially useful. The menus are easy to navigate and make great sense. The only thing missing is a backlight. I use mine for mountain biking and road riding and it’s stood up to a lot of abuse over the last year.

5 Stars Cyclecomputing,…… with an altimeter!
I’ve used an Avocet 50 for about the last 15 years. It still works but the new VDO altimeter is much more sophisticated. I can recommend it.

Pros: Lots of functions, works well, easy to mount and use. The mileage to 2 decimal places,.. hundredths of a mile is great! But,…

Cons; I’m seldom interested in my speed, usually I already pretty well know it. As a tourist, I watch mileage very close. The speed is in big numbers but the mileage is difficult to read, numbers at the bottom of the screen are too small!

And the operation using all the keys to do one thing is too complex. Seems like another key and a simpler sequence would have been easier.

But,.. overall it does seem to be a good computer, I’ve already got about 250 miles on it and it has worked with no problems!

5 Stars Compact unit, lots of info
I got this computer to replace my recently-defunct Avocet 50, one of the earliest bike computers with an altimeter. The Avocet had a single display with big numbers and only two buttons: it was quite simple.

In comparison, this VDO has a wealth of information, but to display it all requires much smaller numbers and three buttons. So of course there are pluses and minuses: the small numbers can display a lot of info at once but are hard to read when the light is dim (I ride a lot at twilight). It’s hard to remember which buttons to press to find the display you want. And two of the buttons are side buttons, which IMHO are much less convenient than buttons on the front (top) face.

Another minor plaint: the documentation is unnecessarily printed in micro-type, and is not especially easy to follow.

But overall, it’s a positive: the gradient feature is nice even if it may not be too accurate, and the ability to switch between two bikes obviates the need to have two computers.

The altimeter function increments by one meter at a time (the Avocet’s minimum step was four meters or ten feet) which suggests rather incredible resolution in their barometric strain gauge, but it works. The unit appears to be well made.

4 Stars All was as expected
All was as expected from the seller. As far as the product goes, I wish it had a better mounting system.

5 Stars Highly Accurate VDO Cyclometer
I’ve had this unit for about 6 weeks and have found it to be very accurate for all of the usual key metrics: Distance, Ride Time, etc.

I really bought this unit for the altimeter functions. It took me a while to learn my way around the unit and find all of the features. Based on riding a marked and measured century in San Diego County on my 2nd ride, I found distance, elevation gain, incline %, max. elevation, and actual elevation at several marked locations on the ride to be extremely accurate (elevation within 4′).

My only complaint is that there is so much data jammed into the display that I can’t really see some of the smaller type. I usually wear reading glasses, and can still read everything if I am stopped, but “at speed” you don’t want to be studying the display too closely, lest you run into something.

Based on my research, the price at BikeSomewhere was the lowest by quite a few dollars. I bought directly from their website (sorry Amazon, I found out later that you had the link too) and shipping was free. Now, I’m going to buy a 2nd mounting bracket and sensor so I can set it up on my MTB bike as well. Which reminds me that the unit allows you to preset 2 bikes and keep track of mileage and elevation gain separately for the 2 bikes.

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VDO MC1 0 Altimeter Cycle Computer

VDO MC1 0 Altimeter Cycle Computer




The VDO MC 1.0 is the perfect tool for the enthusiastic climber featuring 9 altimeter functions and 13 cycle computer functions. The Matrix-display shows your tour-relevant topographical data plus your regular cycle computer readouts. The programmable NAVIGATOR makes following road book instructions a piece of cake. Functions: Current Speed (in Miles or Kilometers); Trip Distance; Total Odometer; Elapsed Ride Time; Clock; One Button Operation; Auto Start/Stop; Average Speed; Maximum Speed; Pace Arrow; Hands Free Auto Scroll through functions; Trip Distance 2; Dual wheel programmable; Auto/Manual Stopwatch; Odometer for Wheel 1; Odometer for Wheel 2; Freeze Frame function; Wired Version. Easy to read 3-line display; Current Altitude (m or ft); Current Temperature (C or F); Current Climb in %; Trip Climb Total; Max Altitude per Trip; Average Trip Incline; Maximum Trip Incline; Total Climb (all trips); Maximum Altitude (all trips); Home Altitude Memory (auto recalibration of home altitude); Service interval indicator.

User Ratings and Reviews

4 Stars All was as expected
All was as expected from the seller. As far as the product goes, I wish it had a better mounting system.

5 Stars Compact unit, lots of info
I got this computer to replace my recently-defunct Avocet 50, one of the earliest bike computers with an altimeter. The Avocet had a single display with big numbers and only two buttons: it was quite simple.

In comparison, this VDO has a wealth of information, but to display it all requires much smaller numbers and three buttons. So of course there are pluses and minuses: the small numbers can display a lot of info at once but are hard to read when the light is dim (I ride a lot at twilight). It’s hard to remember which buttons to press to find the display you want. And two of the buttons are side buttons, which IMHO are much less convenient than buttons on the front (top) face.

Another minor plaint: the documentation is unnecessarily printed in micro-type, and is not especially easy to follow.

But overall, it’s a positive: the gradient feature is nice even if it may not be too accurate, and the ability to switch between two bikes obviates the need to have two computers.

The altimeter function increments by one meter at a time (the Avocet’s minimum step was four meters or ten feet) which suggests rather incredible resolution in their barometric strain gauge, but it works. The unit appears to be well made.

5 Stars best altimiter computer I’ve tried
I love the MC 1.0 it works great on two bikes (you need another mount but they’re cheap since it’s not wireless). The display is a little small at first, but you quickly get used to where to look for what data and then you’re so glad it shows so much all at the same time. I’ve never had a problem with it not recording a ride (unlike with wireless computers) and having the temperature always displayed is especially useful. The menus are easy to navigate and make great sense. The only thing missing is a backlight. I use mine for mountain biking and road riding and it’s stood up to a lot of abuse over the last year.

5 Stars Highly Accurate VDO Cyclometer
I’ve had this unit for about 6 weeks and have found it to be very accurate for all of the usual key metrics: Distance, Ride Time, etc.

I really bought this unit for the altimeter functions. It took me a while to learn my way around the unit and find all of the features. Based on riding a marked and measured century in San Diego County on my 2nd ride, I found distance, elevation gain, incline %, max. elevation, and actual elevation at several marked locations on the ride to be extremely accurate (elevation within 4′).

My only complaint is that there is so much data jammed into the display that I can’t really see some of the smaller type. I usually wear reading glasses, and can still read everything if I am stopped, but “at speed” you don’t want to be studying the display too closely, lest you run into something.

Based on my research, the price at BikeSomewhere was the lowest by quite a few dollars. I bought directly from their website (sorry Amazon, I found out later that you had the link too) and shipping was free. Now, I’m going to buy a 2nd mounting bracket and sensor so I can set it up on my MTB bike as well. Which reminds me that the unit allows you to preset 2 bikes and keep track of mileage and elevation gain separately for the 2 bikes.

5 Stars Cyclecomputing,…… with an altimeter!
I’ve used an Avocet 50 for about the last 15 years. It still works but the new VDO altimeter is much more sophisticated. I can recommend it.

Pros: Lots of functions, works well, easy to mount and use. The mileage to 2 decimal places,.. hundredths of a mile is great! But,…

Cons; I’m seldom interested in my speed, usually I already pretty well know it. As a tourist, I watch mileage very close. The speed is in big numbers but the mileage is difficult to read, numbers at the bottom of the screen are too small!

And the operation using all the keys to do one thing is too complex. Seems like another key and a simpler sequence would have been easier.

But,.. overall it does seem to be a good computer, I’ve already got about 250 miles on it and it has worked with no problems!

Buy/More Info