speculations and rumours about upcoming Suunto watches
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@Freezer according to the leaks it does make a huge difference in watch mode: 60days vs 1 year.
In GPS performance mode much less difference: 60hrs vs 85hrsBtw, giving the fact that the watch with solar lives up to one year indicates that the solar isn’t enough to charge the watch.
I hope I’m wrong in this
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@surfboomerang the fact that solar does increase battery life is the proof that the watch does get charged… maybe not as much as hoped, but still.
Good reason to stay longer outdoors
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@twekkel
… offtopic… I’d like to live “outdoors” at some point. somewhere in the caravan, at the sea, in the mountains, working part time remote and soaking up nature in every free minute that’s the biggest point on my bucket list -
As much as I like Suunto, I’m still skeptical of the solar function. The technology is not new - it’s been used in the Casios and Citizens of the world for decades. My humble impressions are that the effect is negligible unless you expose the watch purposefully under the sun for long periods of time. I get the marketing value - theoretically, your watch can work indefinitely without charging, but I think it won’t be helpful in practice.
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@Ketoohs ah… thanks, I hadn’t realized that yet. But I actually haven’t looked too deep into all those leaked features. We will all see in less then 48 hours
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@Ivan-Vasilev I second that. I own a Fenix with solar and all I can say about it is that for me solar has been a sheer gimmick. But I wanted the multiband version of the watch with sapphire (not sorry I bought it) which goes bundled with the solar. So because of the multiband I had to cave in for the solar. And while the solar is a gimmick, the display with worse visibility which came with the solar is for real. I really hope Suunto has done solar better than Garmin did it.
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@Ivan-Vasilev during road cycling in summer month, solar would make a difference for me, but agreed we are long way from never having to charge anymore. (I do have a running analog watch that I haven’t charged for the last 10 years, DCF77 synchronized, hardly smart)
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@Ivan-Vasilev I use a Citizen Chronograph for nearly 15 years, and it shows ‚full charged‘ all the time. I like this watch, and it is not in the sun for many month in german winter. I cannot compare the energy needed, but I think the energy used by the Citizen cannot be compared with a sports watch…
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@surfboomerang said in speculations and rumours about upcoming Suunto watches:
@Freezer according to the leaks it does make a huge difference in watch mode: 60days vs 1 year.
In GPS performance mode much less difference: 60hrs vs 85hrsJust by how things were written I interpreted this difference to be down to whether you are using single or dual band GPS?..
• Up to 60 hours in the most accurate dual-band GNSS tracking mode
• 85 hours of workout tracking with accurate GPS settingI can’t see how solar would be able to provide an additional 15 hours, I think that’s way too optimistic
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@SuperFlo75 IMHO solar works for your Citizen watch, because of its minimal energy consumption. The latest solar watches from Casio are advertised to work for many months (at least 8, but maybe an year) without solar charging. At the same time, their battery is much smaller, compared to Suunto. I admit I don’t have exact figures, but I’m convinced that Suunto with bluetooth and especially GPS is incomparable to regular chronograph watch in terms of energy consumption. Also, keep in mind that the regular chronograph watch face provides you with much more space for solar cells. With Suunto you’re limited by the display - that is, you can only use the bezel for that purpose.
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From what I could see, on the Titanium solar, the circular band around the screen (not the bezel) is a bit grey whereas it is black on the Black. It looks strange and seems to penalize the aesthetics of the watch. Let’s see what it looks like in reality. An intermediate titanium version without the solar would be interesting.
Let’s wait to see the quality of this screen, especially in terms of readability. -
We will all know in 24 hours. I understand the many reasons to being skeptic of solar, I was also very skeptic until not too long ago.
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@isazi Do you know if there will be video presentation and link that we can view it live? Thanks
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@Hristijan-Petreski I do not know of any presentation, at 10:00 the product page on Suunto’s website will go live, and reviewers will publish their reviews.
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@isazi Ok thanks m8.
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@MiniForklift said in speculations and rumours about upcoming Suunto watches:
@surfboomerang said in speculations and rumours about upcoming Suunto watches:
@Freezer according to the leaks it does make a huge difference in watch mode: 60days vs 1 year.
In GPS performance mode much less difference: 60hrs vs 85hrsJust by how things were written I interpreted this difference to be down to whether you are using single or dual band GPS?..
• Up to 60 hours in the most accurate dual-band GNSS tracking mode
• 85 hours of workout tracking with accurate GPS settingI can’t see how solar would be able to provide an additional 15 hours, I think that’s way too optimistic
You’ll probably be surprised then
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@Frederick-Rochette if you look on the solar versions of the Garmin instict you can see the same. They have a very vissible “redish” tint, while the non solar are quite black/dark. I guess that’s the same with all solar watches…?
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@ChrisA said in speculations and rumours about upcoming Suunto watches:
@Frederick-Rochette if you look on the solar versions of the Garmin instict you can see the same. They have a very vissible “redish” tint, while the non solar are quite black/dark. I guess that’s the same with all solar watches…?
…so far…
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Since we are interested in new things in this topic, will Suunto be coming up with new version of the HR strap? One that can connect to 2 or more devices? Maybe include some running metrics like the Garmin’s HRM?