96 Hour Activity - App shows as "Not Synced"
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@Brad_Olwin Ah, my apologies, I just realized I have also posted under the wrong forum. I have a Suunto 9 Peak, not a Suunto 9.
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@imperial001 said in 96 Hour Activity - App shows as "Not Synced":
How do I check if I have “all the data” on the watch? I do see the correct time, distance, my heart rate (with a graph), steps, calories, and ascent and descent (with a graph) in my logbook.
If you have everything in the logbook (with graphs and all) then all the data is still there, when the memory is reused you do not see the graphs anymore, just a summary.
So, you still have all data on the watch, but I do not think the 9 Peak can hold 96 hours of recording in performance mode.
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@imperial001 This is as @isazi stated. I doubt the 9 Peak has memory capacity for 96h on performance mode. Congratulations on your race!
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Maybe a little bit off-topic, but you ran a 352km race?!?
Respect!!
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@surfboomerang Thanks :)!!
@Brad_Olwin @isazi thanks both for your very prompt responses, so nice to get immediate feedback and know what’s going on. Yeah, I guess it must have recorded 86 hours and then just stopped recording because I have 86 hours of data, but the summary shows the 96 hours. Surprised it didn’t override since I keep hearing it does that, but instead it just stopped – but thankful because 90% of the data is better than 0% hahaha.
I was able to fix the “Not synced” by using my wife’s iPhone. I synced my watch to the iOS Suunto app since my Android kept having the not synced issue, and although it still only pulled 86 hours on iOS, it did successfully upload to the Suunto servers, thereby uploading to Strava, which i’m happy with.
Here’s the sports tracker link that finally uploaded.
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@imperial001 possible solution for your future long activities:
- Use the endurance or ultra mode, they record less data but allow for longer activities to be stored
- Split your activities at some point and sync with your phone
Unfortunately the 9 Peak does not have enough storage to store more than around 80 hours.
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@imperial001 Great to hear that. In case you are interested, the Vertical (my suggestion for your races; my longest is 200km so not familiar with the long races:) would be the watch for you and in Performance mode should be able to handle the data, and certainly in Endurance mode. The estimate of 85h in Performance and 140h on Endurance (with little sacrifice in accuracy) would be ideal for you. It is my watch that I use primarily for training and racing.
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@Brad_Olwin - I take my hat off to you… 200km activity is an epic achievement!! My legs are trembling at the mere thought!
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This is a simple question that I cannot seem to get the answer to. How much memory does the Suunto 9 Peak have? How much memory does the Suunto Vertical have?
Brad, you stated that the Vertical “should be able to handle the data”. What is the estimated amount of hours it can handle on performance mode?
The reason I did not use lower battery modes is because for loop races, I found the GPS quality to be a bit of a bummer. I did a similar race to this one a few months back and did Endurance, and the sacrifice in quality was worse than expected. For peak to peak races I can see it being much less of a problem, but for races where you are repeating one loop, the quality (and your distance) suffers a bit more, by the end I had done something like 70 miles but the GPS had only recorded 64 miles, and some loops were very poor, with the GPS jumping around in very weird patterns.
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@imperial001 Endurance mode on Vertical is better than the 9 Peak on performance mode. The Vertical has extra storage for recording because of chip for map storage. Shouldn’t be a problem for your races.
The memory of 9 peak hard to assess as HR takes up space and more space with higher intensity. A general guide is the watch will safely store #of hours that battery will last in the chosen mode.