Does anyone actually use the scroll on the crown?
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how fascinating to see the variety of answers
Maybe I’ll use the crown more when I’m wearing gloves in winter. It is harder to use when the watch is on your right wrist though.
I notice I swipe to scroll, press the crown to select rather than tap the screen, and mostly swipe to go back rather than use the bottom button.
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@olson917 said in Does anyone actually use the scroll on the crown?:
I do not. I’m one of the 10% or so who is left handed, so the watch is on my right wrist. I’d need to be able to flip the watch upside down to be able to rotate the crown with my left hand index finger and thumb. I can sort of do it with my left thumb but it’s pretty awkward.
I’m in the lefty 10%, wearing it on my right wrist, and I roll the wheel like a fiend. That said, it is easier on my left wrist, but needs must.
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I’m right-handed but wear my watches on the right wrist. I navigate with thumb and crown, and hardly ever swipe the screen.
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@Alejandro Now I’m just really curious how you managed to take that photo
I have visions of you holding your phone in your teeth…
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I also use the crown more frequently than swiping the screen, it’s faster and more efficient (requires less finger movements)
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@far-blue I used a marvelous little invention called a “tripod”.
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I almost exclusively use crown and buttons on my Race. It’s much nore convenient plus I don’t have fingerprints on the screen.
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I never use the touchscreen. Using the crown feels so satisfying.
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I use it for short/small scrolls, map zoom and choosing activity.
Since i have vibration on, it gets a bit over stimulating to feel a vibration when flicking through each menu with the crown scolling haha.
I wished /If there was an option to disable scroll vibration I’d use the crown so much more.
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@Bastienhere Ido
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Late reply. I have had my Race S for a month now and I find the crown really useful when I’m pouring sweat or when it’s raining. Makes scrolling so much easier and I’m not fighting the touchscreen. Extremely useful in these situations.
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I never use it to scroll. It is ‘heavy’ to scroll and there is haptic featback, which I don’t like (I look at the screen when I scroll, so I see what happens. I don’t need other feedback)
But in maps, to zoom, it’s brilliant. But I was used to garmins zoom implementation, which was always a struggle.
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The issue is that the crown on my wife’s Race S is extreeeeemely stiff. It’s really hard to turn and it’s not getting any better by using it. So she is not using it. On my Race it’s super easy to turn, so I am using it really often. I kinda feel sorry for her, because it feels like a faulty product in a way…
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@timecode contact support, the crown should not be stiff
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@timecode the crown from suunto race s is definitely much more stiff than at the race.
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Strangely enough, I use the crown more often than the touch screen. Somehow I almost never use the touch screen and instead use combination of pushing buttons and spinning the crown.
But I should mention that the main function of the crown - to zoom the map - doesn’t work reliably.
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@timecode said in Does anyone actually use the scroll on the crown?:
about 15 hours ago
The issue is that the crown on my wife’s Race S is extreeeeemely stiff
I’ve noticed that too. Race S crown is more difficult to spin compared to Race. Maybe that is because of the smaller diameter.
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@isazi I had a couple of Race S before I decided to stick with it. The first two had a crown that was uncomfortable to use. The third one that I kept has a crown that is lovely…
And for the topic: I use the crown a lot and wouldn’t mind to be able to disable touch screen outside of maps…
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I have Race S titanium and use crown very often. I prefer crown over the touchscreen. Sure, touchscreen is perfect in map.
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I use it just to zoom in on maps. I had completely got it could be used for anything else