Reviews
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@isazi whoa tahnks that is substantial indeed ! I guess this gets theautonomy crazy long.
The fact is that I do ultra of several days in harsh mountain without mush electric plugs so I am right in the target market for such function. However, in those “adventures” I carry a battery for safety and reload my phone while eating/sleeping so I don’t mind charging my S9PP. I don’t get why people refuse to reload during multidays outings, sure they sleep !
What I would like today is a lighter shorter charging cable and maybe better battery alert/tuning while on the run.Another fact is that I started with the ambit3 so I guess I got used to reloading in the bush. After enjoying the comfort of S9PP and its “good enough” autonomy I have grown critical of super beefy & pricy watches in the sake of holy autonomy. Today I see these as an “old constraint we overcome and I don’t regret”.
(Plus I love bashing luxury simply because other people starve.)Why not putting these solar cells on amoled and smaller watches that would benefit more from an autonomy boost ? Is there such a size challenge ? Maybe competitors did it ?
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@Todd-Danielczyk said in Reviews:
I can certainly justify the additional cost for including titanium and solar on a watch based on my above statements.
Never doubt it is more expensive but my criticism is about the amplitude of the uprice: 100€ . I can buy heavier titanium cookware very well finished and manufactured in decent paying countries for so much less.
Reading you I better understand the trickyness for the manufacturing to add these solar cells hence a labor uprice.
In the end these “overpriced segment” subsidize the lower price offer as their higher margin contribute more to the manufacturer’s benefit.
To you the saphir case is similar ? I guess it is just the same on assembly line and we can buy saphir watches for less than 50 so the saphir production cost is not so big.
I have read that saphir synthesis is highly crabon emitting due to energy, I wonder how it impacts the Carbon footprint of wtaches. Would be curious to know more of the contributions to the watch footprint, maybe materials mater more than the electronics in it ?
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@LoïcMichel I think it is similar to most things, applying the value to an item.
I did that with my mountain bike. The bike came in 3 different variants: frame was the same but components were different. I could not justify the cost difference between the low end and high end builds as the high end didn’t have exactly what I wanted.
For me, I bought the lowest end and built the bike to the specifications I wanted, which in the end cost me about the same as the high end bike. We put value where we see it. For me, the price for solar and titanium were reasonable for my watch. I do not do any water sports activities so the Ocean doesn’t fit my needs (but it is certainly a BEAUTFIUL watch!).
I wear my watch on my right wrist, so a rotatable crown is actually a feature I do not particularly like, it is awkward for me to use. Most people love the Race’s crown, for me I don’t. I do not value it, therefore I couldn’t see buying a watch for this feature.
I love the fact we are given options, that is very unique in this marketspace, where we have different choices to choose from.
As for sapphire it certainly takes more energy to manufacture. They make a billet of corundum and then cut wafers out of it. Pretty cool process to see it grown as single crystal (EFG being my favorite to see). Now where that energy comes from makes a difference. Coal plants versus hydrothermal or hydroelectrical power has different impact. Not all energy comes from the same source.
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@Todd-Danielczyk said in Reviews:
I wear my watch on my right wrist, so a rotatable crown is actually a feature I do not particularly like, it is awkward for me to use.
Suunto could consider to allow people wearing the watch on the right wrist (likely left-handed people) to be able to rotate the display by 180°, so they could wore the watch upside-down, with the buttons and crown on the correct side (the two part of strap can be easily swapped). I guess it should require a minimal software modification
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@Stefano-M64 said in Reviews:
@Todd-Danielczyk said in Reviews:
I wear my watch on my right wrist, so a rotatable crown is actually a feature I do not particularly like, it is awkward for me to use.
Suunto could consider to allow people wearing the watch on the right wrist (likely left-handed people) to be able to rotate the display by 180°, so they could wore the watch upside-down, with the buttons and crown on the correct side (the two part of strap can be easily swapped). I guess it should require a minimal software modification
we have had this discussion already several times in this forum.
It is not only about the display and strap. When worn on the right wrist, the barometric sensor will be facing head wind and thus messing altitude readings… So actually you should ask for a mirrored casebtw.: I am constantly wearing two watches and am very comfortable with using the rotating crown with my left thumb.
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we have had this discussion already several times in this forum.
It is not only about the display and strap. When worn on the right wrist, the barometric sensor will be facing head wind and thus messing altitude readings… So actually you should ask for a mirrored casebtw.: I am constantly wearing two watches and am very comfortable with using the rotating crown with my left thumb.
sorry, I’ve missed that!
however, I’m sot sure about such barometric sensor considerations, it can face the head wind even when the watch is wore on the left wrist since people walking or running usually keep their arm(s) oscillating back and forth along the body, and the sensor hole is facing the head wind all the time. And what if the wind comes from other direction? relative velocity of a moving person is usually smaller than the wind speed. I would say that the best place for the barometric sensor hole would be on the side opposite to the buttons…
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@Stefano-M64 Suunto has been changing the baro sensor hole constantly. A3P hat it on the underside at the top. Vertival and Rave have it at the bottom (thus facing your body when worn on the left arm and facing forward when worn on the right arm).
Race S (to come back to topic) has it on the left side of the watch -
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@sartoric yeah, today it is. If you turn the watch 180° like suggested, if would face forward…
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@Egika
oh I missed that. -
I was wondering about the upcoming Titan version:
Just Titane or other change like saphir or color or memory or…Luckily some review leaked some information like the weight 53g and the price 450
Below teh spec sheet of snowleader reveals taht this titanium version is simply identical in all other aspects, Gorilla glass , memory etc…
So it is really 100€ for 7g gained while a microfiber wrist band gains 9g for 60€…To me there is no reason to wait for titanium version.
Btw it seems to my readings that amoled display look better with Gorilla glass due to lower reflections compared to saphie. So there is not only price considerations behind teh choice of Glass vs Saphire.Snowleader.com version “ornage” reveals the titan spec sheet: https://www.snowleader.com/suunto-race-s-power-orange-SUUN00262.html
Then they rectifed their website to teh stainless steel version…
Poids (g) 53
Suunto Race S, câble USB, documentation utilisateur imprimée
Autonomie :
En mode heure : 13 jours
Avec suivi 24/7 et notifications mobiles : 9 jours
Mode entraînement avec GPS : 30 h / 40 h / 60 h / 120 h
Rappels de charge intelligentsGénéralités :
Composition de la lunette : Titane
Composition du verre : Gorilla Glass
Composition du boîtier : Polyamide renforcé de fibre de verre
Composition du bracelet : Silicone
Tailles de poignet : 125 à 175 mm
Largeur du bracelet : 22 mm
Fréquence cardiaque intégrée au poignet
Affichage personnalisable
Verrouillage de l’écran tactile pendant l’exercice
Écran tactile couleur matrix
Alerte par vibreur
Heure d’été automatique
Mesure de l’oxygène sanguin
Étanchéité : 50 m (conformément à ISO 6425) -
Suunto should change this bug in weather app and widget. ![alt text](
image url)How it is possible to have sun ️ icon at night . It should be a moon . Sun are down. 🫥
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What about battery life? DC Rainmaker says in his review that with AOD off he has not gotten more than 5 days out of it. Is it accurate? Does anyone have a review with more data on that? 5 days seems very short to me.
Thank you!
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@Luis-Andés-Olmedo
I didn’t watch the review but maybe he said “5 more days” -
@Luis-Andés-Olmedo
I didn’t watch the review but maybe he said “5 more days”https://www.dcrainmaker.com/2024/06/suunto-race-s-in-depth-review-smaller-cheaper.html
“I’m seeing about 3-4 days for always-on display (albeit with roughly an hour training per day), and about 5ish days battery life with AOD off (with an hour or so per day GPS training).”
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Will be there a body temperature at the suunto race s?
Thats the last feature i am waiting for at any Suunto watch and i would buy it :3 -
@marvelousspeedy I have body temp on my Apple Watch Ultra and honestly, I rarely look at it.
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@krzysMac Sun means clear sky, not daylight
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I hope to follow this written review up with a video one, but here is my take on the Race S after using it for the past several weeks
https://www.actionhub.com/reviews/2024/08/13/5-takeaways-month-suunto-race-s/
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Comparison Race S vs Fenix 8 by active ideas.