As I stated before, the transmitter has no memory, its just a transmitter that ships the data once every 5 mins, if the receiver is not in range then its lost. The G4 and G5 transmitters are the same regarding memory, they both have no memory.
The good thing is you do not need to swipe every 5 mins as you do with the Libre - this is the main benefit.
Thanks, i just wanted to check it wasnt just like that in the G5 - the dexcom site seems not to answer many of my questions. At this point i'm leaning more towards the G4 - whilst the main draws of the G5 are not carrying an extra device, being able to completely silence the alarms, and slightly increased accuracy, relying on my phone having battery all the time is an issue occasionally. I also find my phone alarms don't wake me up for basal testing so i'm not sure if dexcom alarms would wake me, and theres the accidentally closing app possibility. All small niggles that i've found so far, other than cost.
Whilst the costs are pretty much the same in the first year, due to not needing a receiver for G5, if the G4 is still available in a year or so then the longer term costs are cheaper for the G4. The areas G4 is better are battery life - with a G5 i'd have to carry something extra to ensure my phone battery didnt run out on long days, and the connection to transmitter seems more reliable from what i've read. I havent decided yet and am still looking into it, and hoping to try the G4 for a week or two to see if i get on with it first also.
My ideal CGM doesnt seem to exist but it would be
- good price and accurate!!!
- fairly small, easy to carry in pocket with all the other junk, but big enough screen to see data
- adaptable screen - zoom in/out on the part of day you want to see
- able to show the bg numbers for individual data points on the graph
- adjustable scale on the graph, not the highest point fixed at over 20 like libre
- alarms when you want them - variety of sound profiles from silent through vibrate through soft to loud noises
- customizable alarm levels for different days and times - or alarm profiles you can just switch through whenever needed eg work / bedtime / sports
- easy to log carbs and insulin and have display show them on the graph (libre does attempt this but isn't user friendly for me)
- long battery life
- memory of the last hour or so readings so no gap if you are out of range for a while
- simple analysis options available on the receiving device, to get an overview of improvement over time.
- IOB and bolus calculator on the screen with bgs
- at least a 30 day memory, good clear software that stores all the previous bg data whenever you upload it.