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  1. Pronto para enviar 1–3 dias úteis. O Instinct® Crossover Solar é um smartwatch híbrido robusto com GPS com carregamento solar, meses de vida útil da bateria, ponteiros analógicos luminescentes e um ecrã digital.

  2. Veja mais avaliações. Compre online Garmin Instinct Crossover Solar – Tactical Edition, smartwatch híbrido robusto com capacidade de carregamento solar, recursos específicos para táticas, ponteiros analógicos e display digital, preto na Amazon. Frete GRÁTIS em milhares de produtos com o Amazon Prime.

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  3. Available to ship in 1–3 business days. Instinct Crossover is a rugged hybrid GPS smartwatch featuring luminescent analog hands & digital display, Apple & Android compatible & battery life for months.

    • The perfect blend of analog and digital
    • TechRadar Verdict
    • Two minute review
    • Garmin Instinct Crossover: Price and availability
    • Garmin Instinct Crossover: Design
    • Garmin Instinct Crossover: Features
    • Garmin Instinct Crossover: Performance
    • Garmin Instinct Crossover: Battery Life
    • Garmin Instinct Crossover: Buy it if…
    • Garmin Instinct Crossover: Don't buy it if…

    Reviews

    By Matt Evans

    published 31 January 2023

    (Image: © Matt Evans)

    The Garmin Instinct Crossover is a smart, sophisticated watch that’s essentially a revamped Instinct 2, although it’s missing some of Garmin’s latest features that are reserved for its premium offerings. However, the addition of its analog hands makes it the first of its kind, giving it a robust G-Shock aesthetic. If you don’t care about maps or on...

    The Garmin Instinct Crossover is a Garmin Instinct 2 with an upgraded chipset and analog hands, and I love it. It’s one of my favorite activity watches of 2022 based on the novelty factor alone, although the fact it uses the excellent Garmin Instinct 2 as a base means it’s a very capable adventure watch, not just a one-and-done gimmick. It's definitely one of the best Garmin watches out there and the best hybrid outdoor watch I've tried, although it falls slightly short of perfect as it's overpriced for what you get.

    The hands are based on a technology Garmin calls ‘RevoDrive technology’. Revodrive ensures that if the watch takes a big knock, moves into a different timezone, or undergoes any other event which would cause an ordinary analog watch to display inaccurate time, RevoDrive will automatically calibrate the watch using its satellite technology. 

    This technology is also what allows users to actually make the most of the Garmin Instinct 2’s smarts. A simple press of any of the function buttons (other than the light) will stop the watch’s analog timekeeping and swivel the analog hands to form a horizontal line between the 9 o’clock and 3 o’clock positions. 

    Information and workout statistics are generally presented in list form, so you can scroll through the info and see it clearly, even though the analog hands are in the way. When you’re done, return to the home screen, and RevoDrive will return the analog hands back to the correct time. 

    Overall, there are a few improvements in the Instinct 2’s hardware, which we’ll cover later, and all the usual Garmin stuff is as good as ever, including Body Battery functionality, route tracking with TracBack, excellent running metrics, and all the usual health-tracking features, such as heart rate variability. 

    The only issues preventing the watch from earning an elusive five stars is the increase in price as a result of the analog hands, which pushes it into the same territory as Garmin watches with more functionality, such as the Forerunner 955. 

    The Garmin Instinct Crossover is available pretty much everywhere you can get Garmin watches, including at Amazon and direct from the Garmin website. It’s priced at US$499.99 / £479.99 / AU$999.99 for the base version, although the solar-charging model costs $549.99 / £529.99 / AU$1,049.99. A tactical version of the Solar, with stealth mode and a k...

    •Great integration of analog elements

    •Rugged exterior

    •Very thick – maybe too thick?

    The Instinct 2 was already one of the best-designed rugged watches available at its price point. It’s cheap enough to feel like you can throw it around without worrying about spoiling a four-figure watch, yet expensive enough to carry lots of Garmin’s best features and use premium materials in its construction. Garmin hasn’t reinvented the wheel here, with chemically strengthened glass on the non-solar version (the solar version gets Garmin’s Power Glass), and the fiber-reinforced polymer/stainless steel case and bezel that are also present on the Instinct 2. Garmin has also swapped chipsets, from the Instinct 2’s Sony to an Airoha, which expands the watch’s GPS options.

    It’s still a 45mm watch, but slightly deeper at 16mm compared to the 14mm Instinct. This adds additional wrist protrusion to an already very chunky watch, but it’s easy to see why: Garmin has added the analog hands, which have a super-Luminova glow-in-the-dark coating, inside the case of the Instinct. This requires that extra 2mm of space, although we imagine future iterations will be able to streamline the tech somewhat, and bring it down to 14mm or even 12mm. As is, thanks to the rugged bezel, thick silicone strap and analog hands, the whole thing gives off real Casio G-Shock vibes. 

    Until, that is, you press one of those function buttons and the watch bursts into life. Considering that it’s built like a tank, the way the hands are designed to interact with the smart elements of the watch – rotating with the touch of a button to be as unobtrusive as possible when reading the information on the screen – is surprisingly elegant. In the words of Futurama’s Zapp Brannigan, it’s built like a steakhouse but handles like a bistro. 

    •Great health and fitness tracking

    •Good adventure credentials

    •Lack of screen space means certain features are missing

    There are tons of functions and features here, pretty much all of which have already featured on the Instinct 2. Activity tracking features abound, providing notifications on floors climbed, distance traveled and steps taken, as well as other health metrics, such as a sleep score and Garmin’s very useful Body Battery score, which monitors your recovery and tells you how prepared you are for your next adventure. There’s no Training Readiness though, which is essentially a more advanced version. 

    The Instinct Crossover measures your heart rate 24/7. It also offers a heart rate variability measurement (which watches for irregularities while you sleep), and an estimated respiration rate to help monitor your exertion during exercise. It’s a really terrific watch for the outdoors in particular, offering environmental information such as sunrise and sunset from the watch face, as well as GPS coordinates, elevation information, and your distance from a designated destination, which you can set up in the app. 

    The sports profile I use the most often is running, and I’ve given that an extensive go with the Crossover up to around 14 miles. There’s great GPS integration, on-wrist running power, and TracBack, which can help you return to the start of a route.  The autolap feature works well whenever I pass the kilometer marker, as Garmin Connect provides an update in my earbuds with a few stats such as time and average pace, just like most conventional running apps. 

    •Accurate GPS and health tracking

    •RevoDrive works a treat

    •Quite bulky for everyday wear

    During my tests, the GPS was highly accurate, and comparable to the Garmin Forerunner 955 Solar, as well as the Apple Watch Ultra, when it came to measuring my overall speed in time per kilometers covered, and comparable heart rate measurements. I’m completely satisfied with its accuracy, having tested it alongside other high-standard watches, and I’d have no qualms about using it as an everyday running watch. 

    As mentioned above, I love the heat-map design of the routes shown in the app, and as usual, the watch fed my data into Strava and uploaded my runs automatically. LiveTrack, the feature which allows friends and family to monitor your runs remotely, works a treat.

    I personally don’t need onboard music and maps, as I generally use Spotify, stick to the roads, and keep my phone on me, but habitual trail runners might like to make use of both features, in which case they’d be better off with a Forerunner. I can see why people might need these features, but I’ll be keeping my phone on me as a matter of course – as a runner with asthma, I may one day need to stop and call my wife to pick me up, although that’s not happened yet.

    •28 days in smartwatch mode

    •25 hours in GPS mode

    •70 days for solar-extended unit

    Garmin claims the battery life for the standard Instinct Crossover is up to 28 days in smartwatch mode, or up to 25 hours in GPS mode. On average, with moderate GPS usage, that will take you down to a hair under three weeks, which is pretty much exactly what I found – I used my Instinct Crossover for around 18 days before the battery depleted, and charged it up in a little under an hour. 

    The Solar version offers a longer battery life, with 70 days of solar-extended use provided that you spend around three hours a day outside to make the most of its Power Glass technology. Unfortunately, I didn’t have the Solar version (or 70 days) to test it. 

    •Battery life score: 4.5/5

    You want a hybrid watch

    Love the idea of G-Shock aesthetics with analog elements, but Garmin smarts? This is the watch for you. It’s great.  

    You’re an outdoorsy person

    The distinct lack of screen space, and the associated distractions, means you’ve got more time to soak up your environment, and Garmin’s tools do all the hard work for you.  

    You love endurance exercise

    The Garmin Instinct Crossover provides plenty of useful running, swimming and cycling tools.

    You’re on a budget

    If you’re counting the pennies and want substance over style, the Instinct 2 does it all for a lot less.  

    You want maximum bang for your buck

    If you’re looking to spend this sort of money and want a fitness watch with space for music, opt for the Forerunner 955.  

    You want topographical maps

    This is by far the Instinct Crossover’s biggest omission. It would be tough to make it work with the hands, but at this price point it’s hard to argue against its inclusion.

    • Fitness, Wellness, And Wearables Editor
    • matt.evans@futurenet.com
  4. Produto. Garmin. Instinct Crossover. Lançamento: 09/11/2022. O Garmin Instinct Crossover é um novo relógio bastante resistente e parrudo para atualizar a linha de smartwatches da marca em 2022. Seus principais destaques são a certificação militar e também a bateria.

    • Garmin
  5. 8 de nov. de 2022 · The Instinct Crossover is a sport watch with analog watch hands, a new GPS chipset, and Garmin Pay. It has the same features as the Instinct 2 series, but with some differences in battery life and display.

  6. Smartwatch. Garmin lança relógio Crossover com resistência militar e bateria ilimitada. Por Vinícius Moschen | Editado por Wallace Moté | 09 de Novembro de 2022 às 14h40. Link copiado! Divulgação/Garmin. A Garmin acaba de atualizar a sua linha de relógios inteligentes com o novo modelo Instinct Crossover.