COOSPO CS600 GPS Bike Computer Review: Sub-$150 Worth It?
The COOSPO CS600 is a GPS bike computer priced under $150 that punches above its weight class. It delivers 36 hours of battery life, full GNSS support, and advanced training metrics in a form factor that genuinely resembles a Garmin Edge.
That Garmin comparison matters because it sets the expectation. The Edge 540 runs around $300 and the Edge 840 closer to $400. The CS600 does not match either on software polish or ecosystem depth, but it closes the hardware gap more than you'd expect at half the price.
Battery life is where it stands out most concretely. 36 hours covers any gran fondo, ultra-distance event, or back-to-back training days without a recharge. Most Garmin Edge units in this price bracket top out at 20 to 26 hours. For long-course triathletes or endurance cyclists, that difference is real and practical.
Full GNSS means the CS600 pulls from GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, and BeiDou simultaneously. Track accuracy in dense tree cover or mountainous terrain is genuinely competitive with pricier units. Advanced training metrics round out a spec sheet that reads like it belongs on a $250 device.
Not a Garmin replacement. Not a Wahoo Elemnt Bolt killer. But for a cyclist who wants solid GPS, long battery life, and core training data without spending $300, the CS600 is a serious option worth testing.