Suunto ZoneSense
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@2b2bff A perfect example! I don’t use live ZS for less than 6 min. I just use RPE. I will look back at my zones out of curiosity.
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@Mattg576 said in Suunto ZoneSense:
@2b2bff I understand the principles of Zonesense but by that logic my work effort got easier while I ran those hills (which it didn’t, it got harder).
I also understand there isn’t a direct correlation between ZS & HR BUT surely as the work effort increases it would push you up further into the anaerobic state - not nose dive back into low aerobic…
The uphills are too short, it is simply green because the hard efforts were not long enough. Have you watched the videos or read the material on ZS. Those explain what you see.
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@iterum-tenta A great summary! I think to all forum users here…do not equate HR and ZS values or try to force them to fit together. Suunto has extensive information that explains 99% of the issues raised here. It is a substantial time commitment to view all of the videos.
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@Brad_Olwin said in Suunto ZoneSense:
The uphills are too short, it is simply green because the hard efforts were not long enough
What mystifies me though is that I was already in an anaerobic state & my workload increased (confirmed by RPE - I was hanging out my ar#e) yet ZS suggests the complete opposite for nearly 10 minutes, I’ve experienced the same many times before…
I have read & watched some of the material but granted not all of it, the answer must in the bits I haven’t watched yet.
Thanks for your reply Brad.
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@Brad_Olwin said in Suunto ZoneSense:
…do not equate HR and ZS values or try to force them to fit together.
That’s it in one sentence! I think that’s the main problem, the main mistake, made when using ZS at first, since it seems so obvious and somehow it seems like a paradigm change at first. I would also recommend watching the very good videos.
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@Brad_Olwin
Hi,
On one hand I understand this and this is why I am trying to see how I can “translate” the aerobic work (indicated by HR zone 2) into the ZS area.
On the other hand, when I see at my data, except for big fatigue and heat, my HR is quite constant. Same if you listen to pro marathon runners, their heart rate is the same at +/- 1 or 2.
I feel ZS is a great tool, we just need a bit more experience and maybe some more guidance based upon experience.
Even though I watched all great Suunto videos on the subject, I still miss something to use ZS in my training, without watching the HR. -
@flo7z simply put - as I understand it - HR zones are not static but will shift up and down depending on your current condition. ZoneSense takes that into account.
So if you wanna train “classical Zone 2”, you use the green ZoneSense zone. If you wanna go harder use the yellow or red accordingly. -
@flo7z This is the point! Just because your HR is constant does not mean your fatigue is constant. The reason to use ZS is to measure effort in real time. Too many think that HR zones are set in stone. Before ZS I knew my HR would change depending on workouts done prior and how I felt. But I had no idea how much my HR zones could change. ZS matches my RPE very well. Since watching all videos and reading the peer-reviewed scientific manuscripts on ZS (I am a Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology) I trust ZS for my training and trust RPE more than before. On off days I would think it was my mental state but now I know it was likely fatigue.
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used zonesense for the first time today and enjoyed it! i think aside from anything else it’s nice having activity categorized simply as aerobic, anaerobic, and vo2 max, as that’s the core of endurance training and i feel like heart rate zones/RPE get a bit abstract and have unnecessary graduations.
a few questions:
from the faq
There is an analysis feature with ZoneSense where Suunto App defines the aerobic and an-aerobic threshold as heartrate with the DDFA. This analysis maps the heartrate to the ZoneSense DDFA index shifts cross aerobic and an-aerobic thresholds. To get a result from this analysis, the athlete needs to do a workout where intensity is tough and challenging. The intensity needs to grow from aerobic area to an-aerobic level, to get the aerobic threshold as a heartrate result. Similarly, to get the an-aerobic threshold, the athlete needs to do a workout that will have intensity in vo2max range.
do i need to do anything to register these intensity workouts? or is it just a matter of continuing my running with my heart rate belt + zone sense, and once i hit some appropriate sessions in my training, zonesense will update my internal ‘profile’ and get ‘better’ at assigning zones during activity?
ZoneSense maps changes as aerobic and an-aerobic thresholds to corresponding heart rate values. Sudden changes in intensity can introduce errors, so it is best to consider several workouts before setting heart rate zones in your Suunto watch.
I realise ZoneSense is not the same as heartrate zones, but it does seem like it would be a good way to inform your heartrate zones (eg, for use in non-zonesense appropriate sessions like short intervals, etc). So is there a way to get that collected data from all my zonesense activities? eg:
- Aerobic BPM range 90-160
- Anaerobic BPM range 150-170
- VO2 max BPM range (160-190)
(I would expect these zones to overlap given the nature of zonesense over multiple actvivities)
From those ranges, I could personalize my heartrate zones.
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@dankcushions hi, about your last point ; I asked the same kind of question 5 days ago in this same thread.
Since HR evolves depending on your fatigue, the conditions and many other factors, you cannot draw a clear line between HR and ZS. -
@flo7z said in Suunto ZoneSense:
@dankcushions hi, about your last point ; I asked the same kind of question 5 days ago in this same thread.
Since HR evolves depending on your fatigue, the conditions and many other factors, you cannot draw a clear line between HR and ZS.yea i read that conversation
i realise HR is not ZS but that’s not what i’m saying. with ZS you can say when your body is doing (say) aerobic exercise, and that means that we can do some useful stuff with other datapoints we gather within those zones.
like if i could the see the upper and lower bounds of HR that was taking place when i was doing activity that ZS has assessed as aerobic, then that is far more useful info than ‘zone 2 is 65-75% of max heart rate’ or whatever the existing HR range algorithms do.
it might be the range is too wide to be useful, but with some basic statistical analysis it could be made useful for sure. you could taper the end of the heart rate measurements (to avoid ZS ‘lag’), remove outlier results (to avoid fatigue days, etc). perhaps favour more recent results to account for the ZS alg ‘learning’.
that to me could be a much better/alternative. way of establishing heart rate ranges than existing methods. could do similar stuff with pace etc.
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Hi guys,
I’ve used a chest strap on a few of my runs now and the data appeared to be okay based on what I was seeing in the graph.
Not so sure after todays run? I was doing a guided run, intervals with 8 minute walk / 3 minute walk.
Any ideas? This an app issue, readings from the HR belt issue, or watch issue?
Thanks!
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@andrewjknox all walk so should be aerobic. If 8 min run, how hard?
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I did a Steady State Interval run yesterday. 3x10 min SSR with 5 min Recovery. ZS worked very well on a Vertical. Rare that my zones match up this well so I was not fatigued. And yes, I bit too hard for steady state…should have stayed in the yellow but I was running by RPE and did not have live ZS running.
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@Brad_Olwin Aye, it’ll come down to aerobic as expected but the lines are horizontal like it’s missing data?
I’ve shown a run from Wednesday (graph as expected) which was actually the same workout - I’m pretty unfit at the minute, had surgery recently so easing back - my fitness has fallen off a cliff
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@andrewjknox I was not looking carefully enough! The flat lines are either lost HR data or some bizarre HR lock…Make sure the belt is wet, it should not record the data if data are poor. Maybe the app did a bizarre calculation, you could try force quitting the app.
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@Brad_Olwin I initially thought that too but it was recording heart rate data? That’s the background comparison graph in my image. Assume the HRV is just a separate stream of data from the belt that didn’t get picked up?
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@andrewjknox I’ve never seen this!
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The topic may have been asked but I did not find a reference, although there is a reference to determining heart rate zons.
The question is this - at the end of the workout, the zonesense data on the watch is not the same as the data in the app.
I am attaching two pictures - I would be happy to receive assistance in understanding the topic.
Thank you to anyone who helps. -
It’s a much-talked-about problem; in my opinion, many do not trust zone sense because of this. I intuitively believe that the APP data is accurate and the watch data is not. Others, the reverse. The value proposition for Zone Sense is the real-time watch data so they need to fix this for product credibility.