Suunto ZoneSense
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I don’t have the “measured” values and HR values do not correspond to HR zone i can see in information field.
With ZoneSens i am in “arrobie” zone but according to HR zones i should be in zones 3/4/5.
I don’t understand ?
Can someone explain ?
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@Antoine said in Suunto ZoneSense:
I don’t have the “measured” values and HR values do not correspond to HR zone i can see in information field.
With ZoneSens i am in “arrobie” zone but according to HR zones i should be in zones 3/4/5.
I don’t understand ?
Can someone explain ?
ThanksIt is explained above (with links) in this same thread.
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@taziden well this would not be fair to people not using a chest strap (or equivalent device that measures the time between beats)
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@isazi said in Suunto ZoneSense:
@taziden well this would not be fair to people not using a chest strap (or equivalent device that measures the time between beats)
And after using it today and seeing the presentation video, I’m wondering how usable it is in real time as, from what I understand, it requires some time to settle (homeostasis) to be accurate.
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@Zdeněk-Hruška it should also be mentioned in the documentation, but the suggested thresholds are only computed during the first hour, because after fatigue starts setting in. So a good 20-30 minute aerobic test should be enough.
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@obhikkhu yes, totally unrelated, ZoneSense only works for activities (and using a chest strap)
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@Mff73 you need a chest strap that measures R-R and the S+ app is my understanding.
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@larrybbaker for real time, yes. For seeing ZoneSense in the app, just the strap is enough.
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Hello,
So I will give my point of view of ZoneSense.
I’ve had a Race S for a little over a week. When I read that Suunto was coming out ZoneSense, I said to myself “oh that’s not bad!”.
Today, I decided to test this on a road bike ride, on a course that I know perfectly, to see how it works.
I just got back from the exit and my first reaction is…a communication shot from Suunto to make people wait for functions that are slow to arrive on their watch.
I did 39kms in 01h37.
I regularly looked at the watch while driving. The ZoneSense screen showed me 01:23 in Aerobic and the rest in Anaerobic.
I drove hard over 5kms, average speed of 39km/h, heart rate between 160 and 170… The watch told me in Aerobics!?
Once synchronized, the application gives me 0h55 in Aerobic, 0h23 in Anaerobic, and 0h08 in VO2 Max.
It’s nice but it’s by doing the exercise that you have to see that, not after.
So maybe the function needs to be refined, but I’m sorry, I’m a user, not a tester.
The function does not allow you to train at all by aiming at “real-time” areas as Suunto says.
In short disappointed.
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This is interesting. How much time has to pass in order for the algorithm to catch the change? I’ve observed something counter intuitive:
- the arrow was as low as possible when cycling at about 120 HR
- the arrow started rising when I stopped and had a quick rest with HR below 90
This is what I saw with S+
The estimation in SA is similar to last workout - 121vs 123 HR.
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Indeed, the arrow remains at the bottom if the heart rate is low, around 120.
After warming up, I took a slope at a good pace, for 4 minutes. The arrow is mounted slowly to arrive in Anaerobic towards the end of the slope.
So I told myself that it worked and that the effort had to be prolonged for the areas to change.
Except that the 5kms period, where I drove hard (heart rate between 160 and 170), the arrow had to stay at half of the green zone. And in the application this corresponds to a part in Anaerobic then in VO2 Max.
In any case, aerobics corresponds to a not too intense effort. And given the exit I made, this does not correspond at all to the data indicated by the watch.
Even the data indicated in the application is limited.
My feeling would be rather in the 40 minutes of aerobics instead of the 55 indicated.
35 in Anaerobic instead of 23.
And the VO2 Max must roughly correspond on the other hand.
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Can’t understand it, it’s totally counter intuitive.
ZoneSense rises when I rest and falls when I am in a 2 minute interval.
Polar H10 used.
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@mlakis
I also use a Polar, but my zones match with ZoneSense.For you indeed it’s completely wrong.
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@mlakis read again the manual. It cannot be used for such short intervals.
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@Egika thanks for the explanation, this makes sense.
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Not tested yet but very interesting feature.
I have taken a look to older activites where I was using chest strap.
Despite suunto says it may not be very relevant on older activities, I’ve found that it pretty correlated to my HR zones, for trail running and running activities. IT seems that My HR zones for running are pretty well set.
What was more interesting to me is that for bike rides, zonesense seems clother to the feelings i had. much clother than what HR mesurement was suppose to tell. -
Ok, from what I understand there are certain scenarios where the ZoneSense does not work.
After a quick read, I understand that what ZoneSense does is that it can detect and represent the “real” kind of an effort (aerobic, anaerobic, VO2) especially when due to cumulative stress, the effort may be more taxing than what is represented by the heart rate.
But I think it’s overwhelming when exercising or even after training to sit and “study” the graphs for each situation and conclude if ZoneSense makes sense or not for it.
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@mlakis You do not have to study the graphs and see if they make sense. The manuscripts published in peer reviewed sports journals on DDFA have already done this with significant cohorts of individuals. Suunto did not invent this but collaborated to be the first to bring to a watch. If you are fixed on HR zones for training we know that HR is inadequate for ultramarathons and for very short intervals (1 min or less). The advantage of ZoneSense is real time effort. For example, when testing and training I did three ≥4300m peaks on successive days for trail runs. Obviously on the final day I was fatigued. ZoneSense showed that accurately in real time. When I go back and look at the information my Aerobic HR on the first day at 144 bpm had dropped to 122 bpm on the third day! Depending on what you are training for, this would allow you to immediately determine the same effort on day 1 and day 3 would affect training load differently with much more stress on day 3. If I want to keep my effort levels event and not raise them ZoneSense allows me to reduce my effort on day 3 so I do not train too hard.
This is revolutionary and for me eliminates the need to be checking HR on my efforts! During long training runs and races I can use ZoneSense to ensure I stay within the effort I should as I gain fatigue. When exercising all I have to do see the zone I am in. For example, I have a half marathon trail race coming up on Sunday, the shortest race I have ever attempted. I am going to use ZoneSense to see if I can maintain my entire effort in the low anaerobic zone the entire race.
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@Brad_Olwin, thanks for the analysis.
I mainly cycle in varying terrain where even “steady efforts” are not steady enough on the HR perspective.
I had a look on my previous trainings and the trend where the ZoneSense metric makes a deep when HR raises is very often.
I guess it does not work well with the way I train.