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    Water temperature - how long will it take for correct temperature

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Suunto Ocean
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    • K Offline
      kohjl Bronze Member @Gosem
      last edited by

      @Gosem Just did a test by dunking my watch into slightly chilled water. Here’s what I got:

      ec3e3043-08c9-4b2d-8b9a-20d23f8ee915-Screenshot_20240702_113211_Suunto.png

      It took 40 seconds for the sensor to get from about 29°C to 26°C, and nearly another minute to get from that to the final reading of 25°C. But as you can see from the graph, despite the 25°C reading, it was still equalising the temperature towards the very end of the test.

      The test setup:
      All sensors are allowed to rest in a shaded and well-ventilated area to be allowed to acclimate to room temperature. The sensors comprise a Suunto Ocean, an Aranet 4, and a Thermapen IR (temperature probe only).

      Their initial readings just prior start of the test were:

      • Suunto Ocean: 29°C
      • Aranet 4: 29.2±0.3°C
      • Thermapen IR: 29.0±0.4°C

      These represent the ambient air temperature. For what it’s worth, the Thermapen IR comes with a calibration certificate dated June 2020 that is traceable to a laboratory-standard thermometer.

      I then initiated a custom sport mode for recording temperature and left my watch in slightly chilled water. The initial temperature of the water according to the Thermapen IR was 24.6±0.4°C.

      The test ended when I came back from my shower and saw that the watch and the Thermapen IR gave (apparently) the same reading of 25°C.

      211c00df-efd3-4db9-b455-9302508ec81d-20240702_105639.jpg

      Hope that helps.

      G 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 5
      • G Offline
        Gosem Bronze Member @kohjl
        last edited by

        @kohjl hey 🙂 , thank you so much for your time and effort, that’s amazing 🙂
        Unfortunately the result is not what I wanted to hear 😂… I thought they changed the sensor.

        But thank you so much 👍☺️🥳

        K 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • K Offline
          kohjl Bronze Member @Gosem
          last edited by

          @Gosem I’m even more disappointed they didn’t upgrade the HR sensor like they did for the Race S, despite the back-to-back launch with both watches 😭

          The hardware is there, but the will is not.

          G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • G Offline
            Gosem Bronze Member @kohjl
            last edited by

            @kohjl … that’s a pity as well … I don’t understand either. I guess that is because of the special diving certification, which needs a lot of time.

            raceaddictR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • raceaddictR Offline
              raceaddict Bronze Member @Gosem
              last edited by

              @Gosem I think so, the ocean watch code is DW223, Vertical was OW222, Race was OW224 and Race S is OW233 (and 9PP was OW211).
              So, I think the Ocean project started in 2022 as Vertical and Race, and the Race S OHR wasn’t ready yet.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
              • G Offline
                Gosem Bronze Member @kohjl
                last edited by

                @kohjl hi, another idea came to my mind … if you set the watch on diving sport mode, perhaps it will react faster?
                If you have time and fun 🙂 … perhaps you could please try that ☺️

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Shane WatsonS Offline
                  Shane Watson @Gosem
                  last edited by

                  @Gosem said in Water temperature - how long will it take for correct temperature:

                  Hi,
                  I was wondering how the Ocean is measuring the water temperature?
                  Is it similar to the Apple Watch Ultra with a second temperature sensor in the display? This would be much faster then with the normal sensor.
                  I am asking because if jump into a cold river or lake will it immediately show and log the correct temperature?
                  Would be grate and a reason to change from the fenix to the ocean … for me 🙂
                  Many thanks for answering my question.

                  Hi, great question! The Ocean measures water temperature using a highly responsive external sensor designed for aquatic environments. While it’s not identical to the Apple Watch Ultra’s dual-sensor setup, it provides accurate and near-instant readings. Perfect for logging temperature changes during activities like river swims. Hope that helps your decision! 😊

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • Della GarryD Offline
                    Della Garry @Gosem
                    last edited by

                    @Gosem ah ok! Thanks 🙈

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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