Suunto 9 Peak
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@nickk technically it’s portable to the s9b I would assume (remember I don’t work at the watch OS).
I have good faith it will.
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@dimitrios-kanellopoulos we know if there will be suunto peak bigger size?
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@dulko79
more than 1.5 years of daily use. not only skitouring and mountain bike, but also some planks on concrete…
I was pretty amazed when I noticed the first signs of wear
sorry for the bad pic quality… still waiting for my pixel
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@freeheeler Thanks. Looks great, minor scratches. If it was not black, you would not even notice.
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“This forum is temporarily unavailable due to excessive load.” we’re excited about S9P I see
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@wakarimasen well ya, Suunto has always overpriced their offerings on the front end. If I’m not mistaken the Suunto 7 was listed at 500 USD and is now 350 and most reviewers pointed out how 500 was way too high. Even now, you can go purchase the watch that this watch is priced equally at (Fenix 6s), with solar charging and a number of other features mind you, for the same price.
And I get it, people will say that people purchasing these watches have different interests. But I wouldn’t price a watch the exact same as a competitor’s if I didn’t want people to compare the two.
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@zrumlow do you consider at all where the watch is produced how , company location etc ?
Sure there are many even bad ways to make a product cheap.
In the end, I am one of these people that I suppose raise the price ? Right ?
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@zrumlow
you do know that Suunto is not a charity company and the employees have to feed their families, right? -
@stefan-kersting @sartoric Agreed!
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@surfboomerang said in Suunto 9 Peak:
Ordered the All Black version
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@zrumlow In the end, everyone has their own way of determining if something is worth the money, and no-one can really comment on that. For me, after three days of testing Polar-Garmin-Suunto models for some simple navigation, the Suunto came out on top. That means I’m selling the the other two, and have bought a used S9B a few days ago - simply because I was a little nervous about what the new Peak model would bring, and the fear of missing out! Prior to that, I was about to push the button on a custom S9B at £439, which is a price I’m comfortable with.
With regards to the new watch, I think £519 would be ok for me (if it were not so small, as I simply prefer a larger model), and I would not go for the Titanium version, as the additional price for the material holds no value for me.
A Garmin 6X Pro at £516 is of no interest for two reasons:- my own (wholly unscientific) test that I mentioned earlier
- I really dislike the Garmin software environment, as it appears to try to do everything…except what I want it to do.
The price is only one part of the story, and comparing with other models is not always apples for apples.
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@brad_olwin Thanks a lot for the photos. The black looks good, but I think I’m starting to lean towards something silvery after all. Then maybe not… Luckily, with no pre-orders in the US, I have plenty of time to agonize.
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@nickk The first watch I tested was the titanium model, I would argue for that one. It is substantially lighter than the steel. I will likely purchase a production unit as well, it will be titanium. The test watch I had was 48g on my scale…pretty dang light.
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@brad_olwin looks nice!
Although the titanium version also looks very nice, an additional 130 euro just for weight reduction wasn’t worth it for me.
Is the 7 data field screen still available despite the lower resolution?
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@surfboomerang Yes for the data fields.
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@brad_olwin said in Suunto 9 Peak:
@nickk The first watch I tested was the titanium model, I would argue for that one. It is substantially lighter than the steel. I will likely purchase a production unit as well, it will be titanium. The test watch I had was 48g on my scale…pretty dang light.
Thanks for this comment. My fenix 6s sapphire comes in the kitchen scale at 64g and I find it heavier already.
Curious to see the weight with a nylon strap.
In fact, today in nylon straps I guess the garmin enduro one is a reference in confort, but only available in 26mm, so Suunto you can do a 22mm and win some market
Some people use coros or aliexpress nylon straps but I think they don’t have the same quality (I had one from aliexpress and stretched a lot and ended up braking in less than one month).
This S9P really demands to have some straps: nylon for confort in sport, silicone for daily and leather for fancy occasions -
Device looks really nice! Some interesting features as well. Snap to route would be pretty cool once races start again.
I’m way to fond of my S7 though. Don’t think I could switch to a non Wear device now.
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I’m discussing Suunto vs Garmin in triathlon with the 5k runner.
What’s your experience with Suunto in tri and multisport? I think the S9P would be great for that, especially due to the reduced size. Though Suunto still needs to fix the (multiple) power meter and missing swim drills functionality. The S9P makes me considering replacing my 2016 SSU. Though, being a SSU early adopter, makes me wait for reading some real life experience with the units from people before I buy. https://the5krunner.com/2021/05/25/suunto-9-peak-review-comparison/?noamp=mobile#comments -
Pre-ordered the all black version.
Main reasons why I did consider the purchase to replace my S9 Baro:- smaller and lighter for the same autonomy
- new OHR (finger cross it will work better than previous one !)
- release in line with my birthday month
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@theo-lakerveld it depends.
Suunto has two things in triathlon: the mode to change sport is not susceptible to wrong press like others watches and, the second thing, you can have autolap and manual laps.
In the other hand, In Suunto is not possible to customise the screens in triathlon and the support of power meter- speed-cadence is not ideal.
The s9P is the perfect size for triathlon like the Garmin 945. In that segment Garmin is more customisable and let you tweak almost everything.
I have a friend he uses the Garmin for training, the sync with TrainingPeaks is a big deal for him, but when he races he prefers to use the Suunto and in the bike he uses a Garmin 1030.