structured workut
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@szaboat74 lack of this possibility is by far the biggest downside of owning a Suunto watch in my opinion.
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Hello I am also new to Suunto.
Too bad there is no structured and personalized training, plus a hydration reminder or the ability to deactivate notifications during training would be good too, as would managing a call or setting the buzzer.
Do you think one day there will be routable cards? -
@fifi13013 there are structured workouts that can be created in the app, plus tens of third-party providers that can push structured workouts to your watch.
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@dimnekand But only for one predetermined zone as I said above and if you choose a personal range it won’t alert you, so if you want to have a range of 2 zones or want to choose your zones as you want it seems you can’t, and in that case you can follow the structured workout but you won’t get the alerts for out of range zones. You will have to look regularly at the screen to see if you are in the desired zone so kind of half-baked structured workouts.
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@geolerigolo
Yes, yes, you can.
I will try now to upload a video because it’s hard form to explain you by writing. -
@geolerigolo
Videos are too large and can’t be uploaded.
I will try to explain:- you can set specific HR zones for
all activities, see English user guide:
Pages 32-33, and then choose the zone
alert you want, from activity menu. - you can set them for a specific activity,
e.g. running, as follows:
a)from the activity menu scroll down to
“intensity zones”
b)press the crown, choose HR (pressing
the crown again)
c)choose “set target zone” pressing the
lower button
d)scroll down to “edit” and set the upper
and lower limits, go back (pressing the
down button)
e)set the alert for the zone you’ve just edited.
- you can set specific HR zones for
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@dimnekand Ok thanks I didn’t know. But if I do that will it modify my usual HR zones or will it just be for this activity?
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@geolerigolo
As we said before, (page 32-33),
if you follow the path:
settings>training>intensity zones,
you will see on your watch screen
two choices:- Default HR zones for all sports
and - Advance zones.
Activity specific zones
a)If you change (… for all sports) it will modify every activity.
b) if you go to second choice (… advance zones)
you will see two choices:
for running and cycling, let’s talk about running.
Going into the next menu, you will see a ‘soft button’ that activates the zones settings.
After that, everything about running “-and only running-”
(treadmill, road running, trail running etc), will have your modified zones.
Of course, you can deactivate them (soft button) any time
Nevertheless, if you modify (… for all sports) and you decide to change them again on your usual zones, scroll down to the menu (zones screen) and press reset.
It will be reset to your default values (according your age, etc).
- Default HR zones for all sports
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@dimnekand Ok thanks, this way I can use a larger zone to include all the zones I want in one zone, even though it is not as straight forward as other brands
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@geolerigolo This is just a workaround. All changes to the heart rate zones are also reflected in SA after syncing the workout. You will see there your changed zones instead of your real (correct) heart rate zones. If you mess around with the heart rate zones it will also have consequences for the calculated TSS (depending on what zones you change).
Training for one hour at LTHR should give you 100 TSS. As far as I know, LTHR should be the upper limit of zone 4. If you change the upper limit of Z4 for your workout, TSS will be wrong. This has also consequences for ATL/CTL/TSB (if you do that frequently).
So I would say, messing around with the zones just to get those alerts, is a bad idea.
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@wmichi Yeah, seen with this angle it is less attractive^^
I experienced a false type of effort once because I hadn’t change my power zones to the new numbers. Spent a lot of time in zones 1-2 HR, but my power zones were zones 3-4 and so I got aerobic/anaerobic run as a type of workout instead of aerobic.