Is there still demand for a modern MIP endurance watch?
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My v2 tests are ongoing.
My eyes have gotten used to the AMOLED screen. Battery consumption is definitely higher than v1. 3 days of training, walking, and daily use (maybe I played with the flashlight a bit too
) On the 3rd day, the charge was 69%. AOD (Automatic On/Off) was not always on, brightness was medium, otherwise everything else was on. My first impression is that connecting to GPS in dense forests is much faster than v1. Iām continuing to test it. -
so after almost a week the voting is 2:1.
and there are die hard mip fans and people who could be won over by the new amoled technology.I am using both and if I had to decide for one, it would still be mips with solar.
also for the reason of having the watchface visible always and itās not blinding in the evenings.but⦠garmin has microled model⦠what about this technology?
my expectation was that it allows for real AOD, I mean really permanently, and still reaching insane battery life.
when I check the details they either did something wrong or my expectations went all the way in the wrong direction. their fenix 8 with microled has an expected battery life in watch mode of 10 days compared to amoled 29 days -
@freeheeler The vote is heavily biased, because people not interested in MIP simply wonāt bother going to this post
About Microled, its more of an evolution of OLED (inorganic, much better lifetime, better color, responsiveness and luminosity).
And in theory slightly improved efficiency, but I think Garmin decided to showcase the bonkers brightness instead (also, the Fenix MicroLED is a sim-enabled watch)ā¦
But its still not transflective (the LEDs have to emit their light, whereas MIP use the ambient light), so it will never reach the same kind of battery life as transflective display -
@Elipsus
yes sure it is biased
I donāt expect suunto to develop another mips watch. I think V2 was a directional signal. else I would be very surprised.I did not see the microled in real yet. the V2 already is very bright and sufficient on sunny days out in the snow or on the waters
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suunto has a MIP watch that was / (is?) doing relatively OK with the brandās enthusiastits being bvery positive with it. The firmware has had some issues which the company tried to address (not all that successful) .
The market seems to be moving towards a different direction (than a puristsā watch) and the smartwatches are more than decent in the sports area⦠I am also struggling to justify using the V1 over my Apple Watch Ultra 3 on the trainings I am doing (mostly running, biking, tennis) and I think Suunto has realized that as well .
On the flip side⦠, g shocks with LCDs or MIP are also gaining momentum despite having not more much to offer versus suunto/ Garmin etc and their prices are exorbitantā¦
So I believe itās the style that matters and the brand perception that keeps people buying things -
In my opinion, with the new update (2.53.42) not coming to the Suunto V1, this is a pretty big letdown for V1 MIP users.
Features like theseāespecially on the navigation sideāhave been discussed for years now in terms of how they could improve the V1 experience. Meanwhile, competitors like Garmin, even on MIP devices (Fenix, Enduro, Coros etc.), already offer proper map labels, contour lines, and a much more complete navigation package.
At this point, restricting these updates only to AMOLED models feels less like a technical limitation and more like a deliberate strategy to push users toward upgrading to the V2 just to unlock features that arguably could have been supported on the V1.
It basically comes across as a way to drive repeat purchases from the same user base, rather than fully supporting existing customersāespecially when other brands are already delivering these features without forcing an upgrade.Personally, Iāll probably end up moving to an AMOLED V2 device at some point for these reasons, even though MIP would still be my first choice!
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Maybe thereās space for a modern Suunto Core ā basically a mix of the Core and some of the Vertical 1/2 features?MIP, GPS, no OHR etc. Outdoor and navigation functions only.
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@gerasimos whatever the limitation in V1 feels like, it is no a marketing based decision, but rather a technical one. I think Suunto has clearly communicated, that they are facing resources (ROM) issues with Vertical 1. Instead of holding up the whole project, solving this for V1 was postponed to get the big update out for most users.
At the same time Suunto stated, that V1 will still be supported - as of today they just donāt know what exactly will be possible. -
@Egika I get your point, and yesāif there are actual ROM limitations on the V1, then obviously thatās a valid constraint.
Navigation improvements like these have been on the table for quite some time, and seeing them finally arriveābut only for newer (AMOLED) modelsānaturally raises some questions.Also, when competitors are managing to deliver similar or even more advanced navigation features on MIP devices, it makes it harder to fully accept that this is purely a hardware limitation, rather than at least partially a product segmentation decision.
And to be fair, a company like Suunto doesnāt just ārun intoā ROM limitations overnight. These constraints are typically known and planned from the design stage of each model. So itās hard to ignore the possibility that the limits of the V1 were already defined from the beginningāand that now weāre simply at the point where those limits are being used to justify pushing users toward newer AMOLED models.
I do appreciate that Suunto mentioned ongoing support for the V1, but the lack of what will actually be possible going forward doesnāt exactly inspire confidence
itās not just about this updateāitās about how much headroom the V1 really has left, and whether users can expect meaningful improvements or just maintenance updates.
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@gerasimos No idea how Suunto is planning the free capacities when developing a new watch model, but at some point they will reach their limit. However this definitely does not fuel any conspiracy theory about pushing sales for newer models.
Hereās a list of the things that have been introduced since the Vertical was introduced and that eat up spare memory:
I think the list is quite extensive and Vertical 1 has come a long way. Letās see what the engineers will be able to shift around to make some goodies available
- Map zoom level up to 2km instead of 500m
- New intuitive UI structure with mini widgets and richer customization
- New Training Zone widgets for Training (TSS), Progress (CTL) and Recovery (HRV and TSB)
- HRV recovery measurement during sleep
- Multiple clock alarms instead of one
- Find my phone function
- Stand up reminder
- New SuuntoPlus sport apps in some default sport modes
- Running race estimates for 5k, 10k, half marathon and marathon
- Map ruler tool shows distance to nearby location when panning map
- Log pause resume reminder when starting to move
- Emoji support in mobile notifications
- Climb guidance feature during navigation for routes with elevation data
- Possibility to select watch face complications
- Second configurable short cut
- Screen lock in watch mode
- Map zooming now possible up to 20km
- Data field on navigation screen
- Automatic and customizable map re-center
- Sport mode specific display settings
- Vietnamese language support
- Added support for automatic compass calibration
- Added a button lock option in the control panel
- 22 New sports introduced
- Outdoor track running mode with lane selection for 400m track and custom track lengths 200m - 400m
- A wide range of new data fields possible to add in sport mode customization
- Support for pairing multiple sensors of same type
- Showing sensor information, like battery level and name
- New recovery state widget to summarize your recovery
- ZoneSense intensity target setting in sport mode
- Improved Climb guidance user interface and zoom enabled between waypoints
- Passcode feature for securing the watch when off wrist
- New improved morning report
- Connected sensors can be enabled/disabled per sport mode
- Sensor services can be selected separately in sport mode
- New default sport modes for duathlon, swimrun and aquathlon
- New data fields: Instant, avg and lap NGP, Peak power, Peak pace & speed and ascent/descent to next waypoint
- ZoneSense adjustable as target to follow in sport mode
- ZoneSense zone distribution shown in log summary
- Automatic transitions in triathlon sport mode
- Automatic transitions in swimrun sport mode
- Circular transition between sports in predefined multisport modes
- New map orientation selection for north/heading
- In-store demo mode for events and demo purposes
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@Egika Fair pointsāand I agree the V1 has received a lot of updates over time, no doubt about that.
Still, reaching hardware limits is something thatās typically known well in advance during product design. So while all these additions do consume resources, it doesnāt fully rule out the idea that certain features are being held back or prioritized for newer models.
Also, the fact that competitors manage to deliver similar navigation capabilities on comparable hardware makes the limitation argument a bit less clear-cut.
In any case, I guess it comes down to whatās realistically still possible on the V1.
For that reason, Iāll probably end up going for the Vertical 2, just to have the full package of updates and features going forwardāeven if that means moving to AMOLED instead of MIP, which I still prefer. Not sure if thatās a good or bad thing, but it feels like the most future-proof option right now.
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@Egika Iām not in a conspiratory side and I do not think Suunto did not update the SV1 on pourpose but you listing the upgrades that has received the SV1 doesnāt help the SV1 owners, myself included. Is like saying: āyou had enoughā.
SV1 was advertised to be one for adventures, and the last update is just about that, and the SV1 is the one who doesnāt receive it. Even the SRs has receiced the full update, when it is the little brother.
As @gerasimos says, It is difficult to us to assimilate it when other brands are doing it with theoretical equal or less capable watches.
As I have said in other posts I could have bought the SR because, but I went to the SVTS because it /s/was the one for long routes/ultras/bikeā¦, theoretically both have the same hardware except for the MIP/AMOLED, NFC chip and HR sensor/sleep algorithm. I hope I do not regret it, because the new functionalities are the ones that I would use.
I would like to know more about the progress in the SV1 optimization, if we are advancing and if we will get something soonish.
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@cosme.costa
Actually I cannot help with the status of Suunto Vertical.
And I was not trying to say āyou had enoughā. I was trying to explain the current situation. I thought with listing those changes, that were made and most likely eat up resources, it would be easier to understand that this in not just a marketing descision.
In fact there were many more changes
Plus you might not have noticed, but Suunto Race has not received the full update, but has also run into a limitation (which is in the new maps display, like labels on contour lines, etc).
Me guessing: Probably Race received some more memory due to the higher resolution display compared to Vertical
Be assured that Suunto also is not happy with the current situation.
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If Suunto releases MIP bike computer then I donāt need MIP Vertical anymore and can switch to Amoled

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@gerasimos usually, āreaching hardware limitā is not something well known in advance, you plan for what you need, you buy what you need, you use what you need, because buying more than what you need is just a waste of money, PCB space, and even battery life, so choosing a microcontroller is a balanced act, and āprovisioning for laterā is a very, very hard task especially talking after 3 years, and important company restructuration (Suuntoās last 3 years where not easy, and definitely not the ideal space to think about the possible future updates size when the company was being sold, restructured, etcā¦).
Also, its pretty hard to compare with competitors, because, yes, they are doing roughly the same stuff , but hardware µcontroller choices are by the dozen, and even inside each lineup, you have a lot of combination of cpu power, ROM, RAM, features.
For example, take the STM32 H7 line :
https://www.st.com/en/microcontrollers-microprocessors/stm32h7-series.html
its just, a single manufacturer, a single chip line from the STM32 range of products, and yet the flash storage range from 620kb to 2MB, and even the processing power varies from a single core at 200Mhz to a dual core at 400Mhz, inside the same āSTM32H7ā brand, in total there are 12 combinations !Once the updates start taking more space, you make do with what you have free, until you canāt do it easily, then you have to take time and man-power to optimize, find code that can take less space, do tricks with off-chip storage, etc., but its not easy
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@elipsus Thanks for the detailed explanation
I appreciate the insight. I donāt really have the technical knowledge to go that deep into hardware topics, but I can understand that all these factors together define the limits of a device.
That said, I still stand by my point: when a company sells today a watch at the āsame priceā with a MIP display, but it ends up receiving fewer or more limited updates compared to the newer V2 with an AMOLED screen, it can create confusion for new customersāand eventually lead to disappointment.
In the end, the V2 turns out to be more than just a flashlight and a display upgradeā¦
Most people who chose a device like this did so because they wanted a hardcore solar outdoor watch (700ā¬)āso seeing it start to feel limited after just a few years is not ideal.I still believe this is part of a broader strategy that allows the company to keep evolving its product lineāand thatās totally fair from a business perspective