Suunto ZoneSense
-
@gone-troppo Haha, great, I had hoped you would read it as I got stuck exactly like you. No idea why the Suunto App would not be flagged as updatable even when searching for it specifically in the App Store, this caught me (us) by surprise. Glad to hear that it worked for you.
-
I couldn’t find the topic that’s why I’m asking
In the RACE watch, I activate structured training and also activate ZONESENS, but when I press “start”, the ZONESENS option does not appear. I checked the training options and in a strange way the ZONESENS was off. I turned it on and still the same problem
The watch was reset and it didn’t help - I’d appreciate your help
@Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos
@isazi -
@Danny-poleg There appears to be a maximum number of Suunto+ Apps and Suunto Guides that can be active at any one time. If you cannot activate ZoneSense, it helps to deactivate one S+ app or one Suunto guide and try again.
-
@Christoph13 said in Suunto ZoneSense:
Regarding the real-time use:
I am in my tapering phase for a race in about a week’s time. I will probably race by feel but what should the ZoneSense display during a half marathon if I manage to push myself just hard enough? What would I gain compared to say following a combination of pace/HR or Stryd Power?Also, I have done the last five runs or so with my Polar H10 HR belt, and the zones appear to match exactly the ones I calculated based on the last race results (except one that is so far off to be untrustworthy).
What kind of training session would help to make ZoneSense more accurate in the time remaining?
ThanksI would imagine you’re going to see a good amount of time in aerobic slowly progressing into anearobic and eventually v02 max if you finish hard
The main benefit I suppose would be to maintain whatever zone you’re trying to stay in while leaving room for a strongly pushed finish.
-
@stromdiddily Thanks. I am always weary of relying on a metric that I have insufficient experience with.
When you are racing, you want to be close to the special mark on your personal fitness scale on that day, but on the correct side. Looking at the handful of runs with Zone DDA data, it looks like I will be racing mostly in the yellow zone (in ZoneSense it is called anaerobic but I suspect what it means is that it is no longer fully aerobic, which is fine).
For the race this probably means to progress mainly through the yellow zone with some excursion into the red during the finish, however long that may be.BTW, I am seeing some of the weird behaviour reported by others, too, i.e. pace or heart rate go up, ZoneDDA becomes more aerobic,…
I’ll see how the half marathon goes and then take a look at the data again.
-
-
@sartoric I would think not? the app is on the watch
-
@larrybbaker
The S+ app is used to have real time data while recording the activity -
This is function is really good. Have now used Suuntosense 4 times and have nothing to complain.
But i don’t think this is for me since I always get the same results, even if I feel good or tired and therefore don’t see the point of using it right now -
@TyreseJ4 said in Suunto ZoneSense:
@Mauerwegler Link?
https://forum.suunto.com/topic/6836/firmware-collection
Haven’t done this myself, but you have to download the version you want and then drag‘n‘drop the file on the Suuntolink software on your computer.
-
@TrailEyes very nice article
-
I would appreciate if one of you guys could help me interpreting my ZoneSense data. BTW a very interesting feature I want to understand more.
The first screenshot is from a spinning activity. 20 minutes warm up before weight lifting and I felt that I did an ordinary effort. Not to hard.
The second screenshot is from a spinning activity of 50 minutes with three intervals. I did an hard effort but it wasn’t a maximum effort. When I see the aerobic threshold here it is 152 bpm, actually the max of my zone 4. what does that mean? Have I to adjust my zones now? -
-
@Antoine said in Suunto ZoneSense:
So it is only with HR belt, it does not work with optical sensor on the watch ?
It should work with the Scosche Rhythm24 OHR, as long as you set it to measure HRV.
-
@Stefan-Kersting I have been wondering the same after my first run. Z2/Z3 limit proposed by zonesens is far lower in my case than the level i have in HR zones.
My thoughts so far : I won’t change my HR zone and see in next weeks months how zonesens will evolve. If have understood well it should need time for the algo to calibrate. And whatever it says, it is supposed to take more consideration of health condition. So when hill it should always propose different HR values than those set in SA.
So my final point is : my HR zone are probably “well set” when I’m fit and healthy. Zonesens should bring in time more indications about my real capacities of the day. -
My 33% “good experience” with ZONESENSE.
(Suunto 9PP + PolarH10 heart belt / IOS App v2.38)
The last few days I have tried Zonesense three times with the following performance results:
- Mountain bike. No route tracking. WATCH FAIL (*) / APP OK
- Mountain bike. With route tracking. WATCH OK / APP OK
- Trail running. With route tracking. WATCH OK / APP FAIL (**)
(*) On the watch, the zone sense screen only indicated zone 1, regardless of heart rate or effort level, without the zone gauge moving. Later, however, in the app, the different zones were identified with colors and the thresholds were marked, etc.
(**) On the watch, everything worked perfectly, as expected from the Suunto+, indicating the times in each zone, the gauge indicating the appropriate section, etc. But then nothing appeared in the app, as if nothing had been registered.
Anyway, a promising feature that hasn’t worked consistently for me yet. I’ll keep trying over the next few days.
-
@enriqueescoms said in Suunto ZoneSense:
(*) On the watch, the zone sense screen only indicated zone 1, regardless of heart rate or effort level, without the zone gauge moving. Later, however, in the app, the different zones were identified with colors and the thresholds were marked, etc.
I’ve seen it too - however, zones switched as expected, only the gauge didn’t move. I think it was after unpausing the watch?
-
@Łukasz-Szmigiel said in Suunto ZoneSense:
I’ve seen it too - however, zones switched as expected, only the gauge didn’t move. I think it was after unpausing the watch?
Mmm, well, thinking about it, maybe the pauses have something to do with it.
In fact, the only activity that worked well (watch and app) was the one without a pause.
In the first one, the autopause was activated shortly after starting (I have autopause in this sport mode). And in the second one, I activated and deactivated the pause during a stop (in trail running I don’t have autopause activated).
I’ll keep an eye on this aspect, thanks.
-
@Łukasz-Szmigiel I also had issues with ZoneSense, and I also did pause. I explained here: https://forum.suunto.com/topic/11713/race-misbehaving-in-multiple-ways
-
I am seeing an issue in the APP where periodically the watch will record and display the ZoneSense screen perfectly but when I sync to the app the ZoneSense dropdown is not available. If I kill the app it then loads correctly allowing me to see the ZoneSense data and flip between other metrics. Latest iOS beta SA, Suunto Vertical Ti. Morpheus HR Strap.
-
@ferns said in Suunto ZoneSense:
@Antoine said in Suunto ZoneSense:
So it is only with HR belt, it does not work with optical sensor on the watch ?
It should work with the Scosche Rhythm24 OHR, as long as you set it to measure HRV.
I rather suspect you might be able to make it display something because the minimum condition “HRV input feed present” is satisfied but the data quality is bound to be orders of magnitude lower for optical beat-to-beat analysis compared to a chest strap based on electric impulse detection to make the analysis meaningless (Garbage in, garbage out).
That is not to say that the Scosche is a bad heart rate meter (I am using a Polar Verity Sense myself), I just would not trust HRV data coming from anything but a chest strap.