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Garmin GLO 2 Bluetooth GPS Receiver Bundle with Vehicle Power Cable 010-02184-01

  • Based on 78 reviews
Condition: New
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by MVP Extreme✅

Arrives Jun 29 – Jun 30
Order within 4 hours and 23 minutes
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Features

  • Connects wirelessly to iPad iPhone and other Bluetooth enabled smartphones, tablets and laptops
  • This allows GLO to lock on to satellites approximately 20% faster and remain connected even at high speed
  • GLO can receive position information from both the GPS and GLONASS satellite constellations, allowing it to connect to up to 24 more satellites than devices that rely on GPS alone
  • It offers up to 13 hours of battery life and a position update rate of up to 10 times per second (update rate may be limited by the host device)
  • GLO, vehicle power cable, USB cable, Liion battery pack. Compatible devices: BlueChart Mobile, Fishing My-Cast, Garmin SteelPilot Onboard

Description

Navigate with Garmin caliber GPS data on the mobile device of your choice. The GLO 2 receiver brings you the best of both worlds by combining GPS and GLONASS receivers with Bluetooth wireless technology so you can enjoy precise position information on your iPad, iPhone or Android device.The Accuracy of GPS and GLONASSGLO 2 can receive position information from both the GPS and GLONASS satellite constellations, allowing it to connect to up to 24 more satellites than devices that rely on GPS alone. This allows GLO 2 to lock on to satellites approximately 20% faster and remain connected even at high speed. What’s more, GLO 2 updates its position information at 10 times per second; that’s up to 10 times more often than the GPS receivers in many mobile devices.Set it Up and GoUsing Bluetooth technology, the GLO 2 receiver wirelessly pairs to your mobile device. Just set GLO 2 within range of your mobile device, and in moments, you’ll be receiving the GLO 2 receiver’s position data. It has up to 13 hours of battery life to keep your position on long trips, and charging GLO 2 between uses is easy with the included USB cable 12/24 V vehicle power cable. The optional friction mount keeps the receiver safe on your dashboard and in full view of satellites.6-Month Garmin Pilot SubscriptionSelect the bundle to turn your iPad or iPhone into the ideal cockpit companion. A 6-month subscription to the Garmin Pilot app puts full- featured navigation — including our decades of experience with rich, interactive mapping, 3D Vision, aviation weather, global flight plan filing, electronic flight bag capabilities, optional traffic/weather, pilot logbook and more — right at your fingertips.Included with this bundle is a Garmin vehicle power cable!

Brand: Garmin


Special Feature: Bluetooth


Connectivity Technology: Bluetooth


Map Type: Satellite


Sport: Fishing


Battery Life: 13 Hours


Mounting Type: Dashboard Mount


Product Dimensions: 2.99"L x 1.65"W x 0.7"H


Item Weight: 40 Grams


Year: 2019


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 2.99 x 1.65 x 0.7 inches; 1.41 Ounces


Item model number ‏ : ‎ GLO 2


Batteries ‏ : ‎ 1 LR44 batteries required. (included)


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ June 24, 2021


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Garmin


Customer Reviews: 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 78 ratings


Item Weight: ‎1.41 ounces


Product Dimensions: ‎2.99 x 1.65 x 0.7 inches


Item model number: ‎GLO 2


Batteries: ‎1 LR44 batteries required. (included)


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Battery Life: ‎13 Hours


Voice command: ‎Touchscreen


Date First Available: June 24, 2021


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Jun 29 – Jun 30

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Amazingly good when used with iPad and mapping software
This is a much longer review than I'd normally write so bear with me - I have to give a little background for this to make sense. My wife and I are planning a cross country auto trip, picking up a car in Florida and driving back to Washington state over several weeks. We decided we'd do so via Route 66, Chicago to Santa Monica. We ordered a Route 66 planning guide (Jerry McClanahan's Route 66: EZ66 GUIDE For Travelers , 4TH EDITION). What became instantly apparent was that the car's navigation system would not be much help - while you could travel Chicago-Santa Monica that way, there was no way that you could tell the system to do it via McClanahan's guidebook. You'd be in the vicinity of Route 66, but not on Route 66. I spent hours looking at ways to map the precise path into the car's GPS - POI files, favorite routes, etc - but given the number of turns in the McClanahan guide there's no remotely straightforward way to do it with the Chrysler Uconnect system; even if you are willing to tolerate keying multidigit lat/long values into the car, most car GPS systems allow for less than 20 intermediate points on a route so that will get you like 30 miles on 66 before you get to stop to key another whole set of coordinates. Eventually after a lot of trial and error, I was able to work out the following: 1) Using Google Earth (the satellite view tells you a great deal about the route and lets you look at road signs in Street View), add pins for each traffic direction point in the guide (Rt 66 westbound will have about 900 such pins, so I split them by state). A ) Name the pins with a sortable prefix - I just used sequential numbers starting at 001 in Chicago to 900-something at Santa Monica. B) Add a label to the prefix with what you need to do there, e.g. "Left onto Hwy 29" C) So my pins all are something like "0347 - left across I-40" 2) Export the pins via KML; using the Viking GPX editor or something similar (I cannot say enough good things about Viking - its interface is a little idiosyncratic, but it does an amazing job and is freeware), import the KML pins as waypoints. 3) Viking now shows all the pins as waypoints. Select a map base - I use Open Street Maps - and using Viking's track editor, create a track that links the waypoints IN ORDER BY THE INDEX NUMBER IN THE NAME. In other words, the track reflects the waypoints in the order in which they will be encountered. 4) Export the track(s) and waypoints from Viking as a single GPX file. 5) Using Dropbox or similar, move the GPX file to a mobile device (I'm using an iPad Pro 12.9). You will need a mapping program or two - lots of articles on using various apps. I am using 2 apps - GPS 55 ($6) and GPS Tracks Pro ($30); the paid for versions add things like the ability to import GPX files or store map tiles if internet is not available. What you now have a a highly detailed map on the mobile device that shows you EXACTLY where the next waypoint is, exactly what action to take, and the precise path down to a few feet that you'll take along the way. (Hint for Viking: I like to run the track editor at zoom level 13-15 and trackpoints no more than .25 miles apart, much less on curves. Takes more time - I can do about 350 miles of track in about 7 hours - but this smooths out the road curves and doesn't put trackpoints out in fields near the road instead of on the road). The above took several weeks to work out but it gave me exactly the map I wanted. Now I needed to add in tracking so I'd know where I was relative to the track I was following. And this is where things came apart. I already had a Garmin GPSMap 65 - highly accurate and it has a Bluetooth connection via the Garmin Connect app that lets the 65 tell the iPad where you are. Add in a mapping app and you have a moving map navigation system capable of 12-15 foot accuracy, right? Except that the refresh rate is so slow and the position so inaccurate as to make the whole thing useless. The 65 is an astonishingly precise system - I use it for photo location and it's usually within 6-8 feet with essentially instant update and its internal tracks are very, very accurate - so I do not know if this is an issue with the Bluetooth transmission or the Garmin Connect app. In either event, this was not going to work - the whole point of doing this level of mapping is that you'll know exactly where you are, when the next change is, and what to do when you get to that waypoint. Having the system lag way behind or be off in the bushes several hundred yards from your real location is not going to help. So I took a flier and ordered the GLO2 as an alternative to the 65. Tried it yesterday, 40 mile round trip. Took about 30 seconds to link to the satellites at the end of the driveway, way less than that to link to the iPad (no Garmin Connect app in the way!) and we were off. Never lost lock to either satellites or Bluetooth. Performance was amazing. We have a roundabout near us; our path on both GPS 55 and GPS Tracks actually showed the semicircle we made going through the roundabout. Using Open Street Maps, our position was sufficiently precise that it accurately indicated which side of the 2-lane highway we were on. It updated - according the the GPS 55 diagnostic tool - between 3 and 5 times a second consistently. This was enough that the apps actually showed smooth movement instead of jumps. As far as I can tell, the unit was off by - at most - something under 30'. As I said, a long story to get to that last paragraph but I figure there's likely someone else out there trying to figure out how to do the same thing so I put in the backstory both as explanation and instruction. I now have an iPad which, when linked to the GLO2, gives me sufficient precision I can follow any track I lay out in Viking. So I've added all of our side trips, tourist attractions, etc in as their own tracks; to make those side trips all we need to is just follow the arrow onto those tracks. If you don't care about exact route, use the car GPS and let it figure the best way. If you care about an exact path, a tablet with a GLO2, Viking, and some tablet mapping software will do wonders. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2022 by Unrepentant

  • Great GPS Receiver
I use this with ForeFlight and my Apple iPad. It works great and connects to me iPad when I turn it on. Highly recommend this GPS receiver.
Reviewed in the United States on September 28, 2023 by Bryan G

  • Greatly increased accuracy.
The product performs as well as my other garmin products. It increased the accuracy of both my Samsung phone and iPad which I use for field mapping regularly. The increase of accuracy went from 52 foot deviation to 7.4 feet at its best and averages around 9 foot accuracy +/-. The battery life in its new state is over what was stated of 13 hours. Although, I am expecting it to drop over time as all batteries do. It is a replaceable battery though which is quite nice instead of a sealed unit. I've also further extended the life with the use of a solar charger attached to my pack for back country work. I'm pleased so far and hope it continues to give me similar accuracy while the unit ages. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2023 by jeremy hamilton

  • Works well with my Ipad Air 5 IOS 15.7
Setup instructions were clear and straight forward. After I used Bluetooth to pair My Garmin GLO 2 Bluetooth GPS Receiver with my iPad Air 5 (Ios 15.7) it informed me that I was missing an app and sent me to a non-existent App in the App Store. I closed the App Store and started using the Waze app and noticed that the location accuracy was OK for driving directions to a local barber shop. I used it with Google Maps at a local hiking trail and estimated location accuracy to be within 20 feet. I returned home and found this request for a revue waiting in my email in box. My revue describes my first 4 hours of using my new Garmin GLO 2 Bluetooth GPS Receiver. I lost the GPS Receiver when I arrived at the hiking trail and found it on the floor of my car beside the driver seat. It fell out of my pocket when I pulled out my iPhone. The case of the GPS receiver is slick which made it easy for it to slide out of my pocket. I feel that this review will be more useful if you compare it with other revues. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2022 by W. Manly

  • It's not easily catching the gps signal
I got this product and use it in the aircraft during my flights. It stands next to the window all the time and should catch the signal in max 1 min but it most of the time takes around 5-10 min to connect or sometimes it does not connect to gps satellites and I have to reset and try it again. I am not very happy with the product. As long as it is connected to a satellite, it is very accurate but my concern is its ability to connect :( ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2023 by H Sanci

  • Very important piece of equipment if you use maps
Works perfectly even inside my boat. Using it with navionics on a non gps ipad. Battery is kind of a joke. I just leave it plugged in all the time.
Reviewed in the United States on July 29, 2023 by Amazon Customer

  • Excellent for IFR Flight
This little T/R is great for instrument flying with GPS into weather. The only issue is that even though it is in fact WAAS-enabled, you still have to fly into GPS approaches with LNAV to Circling minimums. This does NOT have LPV capability. A word of caution for aviators. Also, this is not ADS-B capable, so you still have to get the Stratus to get both. Other than that, it's a really really accurate gadget! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2023 by The Heath's

  • Great reception
I was thinking of upgrading my iPad to one with cellular connection with GPS but when I saw this item I saved money by not having to buy a new iPad. I just use my phone’s hotspot and connect to the Garmin via Bluetooth. Works like a cellular iPad without the extra cost on paying another cellular bill or more expensive iPad. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2023 by Will

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