Vo2 levels
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@ldxmsg of course. Vo2max can be defined better at max capacity.
I would:
- Do a full reset of the watch (as the watch bases the vo2max on the 6 last sessions as well)
- Set up the zones like my Garmin
- Use a belt and garmin with OHR
check the value after 1-2 good workouts.
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@dimitrios-kanellopoulos Will give it a go. Many thanks.
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Running at same pace for 15 minutes so that at the end you feel nearly exhausted.
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@lexterm77 said in Vo2 levels:
so that at the end you feel nearly exhausted.
Or you have heart attack
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@sartoric That’s what I’m afraid of. I’ll never look at my VO2max levels again, just to be sure!
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@sartoric said in Vo2 levels:
@lexterm77 said in Vo2 levels:
so that at the end you feel nearly exhausted.
Or you have heart attack
If you do it often, body adapts to it. (Not the heart attack)
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An independent test for VO2 max that is fairly good. For me, this test and the S9 baro give very similar results. Cooper test. It is best done on a track.
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@brad_olwin ah yes, the “cooper”
Reminder of the glory days of yesteryear, and fitness testing…stuff of nightmares
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@stromdiddily said in Vo2 levels:
@brad_olwin ah yes, the “cooper”
Reminder of the glory days of yesteryear, and fitness testing…stuff of nightmares
Go to a sports lab and ask them to extrapolate data with half the maximum effort
Edit: bring helmet with you
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The Garmin only takes in count the running (not trail running, hiking…) and cycling and ONLY with heart rate strap if I recall well.
That’s different of the Suunto.
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@bulkan said in Vo2 levels:
The Garmin only takes in count the running (not trail running, hiking…) and cycling and ONLY with heart rate strap if I recall well.
Running with HR (no belt necessary for what I remember), cycling with a power meter. And they end up in two separate VO2Max values, one for running and one for cycling.