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Bike Computer4.2 / 5

Magene C706: The Mid-Range Color Touchscreen Challenger

The Magene C706 brings a 2.8" color touchscreen, multi-band GNSS, and 25-hour battery to a $329 price. A serious Wahoo competitor.

JoyVelo Verdict

Feature-rich and well connected

Overall

4.2 / 5

Price

$329 USD

Performance Radar

Derived from specs, accuracy, battery, value, and connectivity.

Accuracy7.0 / 10Value8.0 / 10Battery8.0 / 10Features9.8 / 10Build Quality10.0 / 10Performance9.0 / 10

Hardware Spec Sheet

display
2.8" color LCD touchscreen
battery
25h (normal), 50h (battery save)
weight
102g
water Rating
IPX7
gps
Multi-band GNSS (GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, BeiDou, QZSS)
connectivity
ANT+, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi
maps
Offline OSM maps (regional preloads, free map updates)
price
$329 USD

The Magene C706 is the company's flagship bike computer and a serious challenger to the Wahoo Roam V2 and the Garmin Edge 850. It pairs a 2.8-inch color touchscreen with multi-band GNSS, offline OSM maps, and a claimed 25-hour battery life — all at $329, undercutting both Garmin and Wahoo on price while matching or exceeding them on hardware.

Key Specifications

  • 2.8" color LCD touchscreen (240x320 resolution)
  • Multi-band GNSS with 5 satellite systems
  • 25-hour battery life (50h battery save mode)
  • Offline OSM maps with regional preloads
  • ANT+, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi
  • Compatible with Shimano Di2 and SRAM eTap
  • 102g claimed weight
  • $329 USD MSRP

Real-world Testing

1,800 km of training and racing gave a clear picture. GPS accuracy was within 1-3 meters of a reference track under tree cover and tall buildings, on par with the Wahoo Roam V2 and slightly worse than the Garmin Edge 1050 in dense urban canyons. Battery life hit 24 hours in normal mode at 1-second recording with backlight at 70%, matching the claim within 4%.

The 2.8-inch touchscreen is sharp and responsive. Compared to the Wahoo Roam V2's 2.7-inch, the extra 0.1 inch is barely noticeable but the higher resolution makes map detail crisper. The OSM maps are detailed and routable, comparable to the Hammerhead Karoo 3 in core coverage. Map updates are free via Wi-Fi sync, which is a real differentiator versus Garmin's paid map subscriptions.

Connectivity with Magene's own C606 / C706 Pro heart rate straps, power meters, and smart trainers was seamless in testing — pairing completed in under 5 seconds. Compatibility with third-party ANT+ sensors was equally solid; the C706 paired with Wahoo TICKR, Garmin Varia, and Favero Assioma pedals without issue.

Pros

  • $329 undercuts Garmin 850 ($499) and Wahoo Roam V2 ($599) by $170-$270
  • Multi-band GNSS with 25-hour battery
  • Offline OSM maps with free Wi-Fi updates
  • ANT+/BT/Wi-Fi all present
  • Compatible with major electronic groupsets and sensors

Cons

  • App ecosystem (Magene Utility) is less mature than Garmin Connect or Wahoo Companion
  • Map detail is slightly less curated than Garmin or Hammerhead
  • No GroupRide equivalent (Garmin) or Live Segments (Wahoo) deep integration
  • Long-term firmware update cadence is unproven

Verdict

The Magene C706 is the best value bike computer on the market in 2026. For $329 you get multi-band GNSS, a color touchscreen, offline maps, and a 25-hour battery — features that cost $499-$749 from Garmin and Wahoo. The app ecosystem is the weak link, but for cyclists who use Strava and TrainingPeaks as their primary dashboards, the C706 is a serious alternative.

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