Suunto ZoneSense
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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.
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I’m still not seeing ZoneSense in the Suunto phone app on any of my activities using a heart rate chest strap. I’m using version 2.38.0 (16480) on iOS (the latest beta version available through TestFlight). My heart rate monitor is a Wahoo TICKR. I’ve looked at activities recorded using my Spartan and others recorded with other devices and synced to the Suunto App.
When I look at the Analysis chart in the activity card, I don’t have the option to select ZoneSense as a chart variable.
Am I missing something? With activities recorded on non-Suunto devices and synced to the Suunto App, the activity card doesn’t show time in heart rate zones, because the zones are defined on the watch. But my impression was that ZoneSense was done in the phone app (or in the cloud), since it supposedly works for activities recorded with older Suunto watches too. Either way, I’m not seeing anything even for activities recorded on my Spartan.
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How long should I stay in above anaerobic threshold in order to get a post-workout anaerobic threshold estimate? On average.
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And this deep/“dive” on the metric is evident generally when the HR starts to ramp up, even in the examples given by Suunto:
Excuse me for the sketchy way I marked them, I am using my phone to do it.
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@Brad_Olwin thanks for the write-up and I appreciate your understanding of this as you are a scientist yourself.
I’m curious about this and listened to the video lectures by Suunto. Am I correct in understanding it this way that when I’m focused on base building in max 1-1.5 hr workouts, I can safely push within what Zonesense lays out for me as my Aerobic Zone (AeZ). So even though I may occasionally dig into my previous Z3, in this new paradigm (and how it’s co-related to lactic acid levels and actual stress), I am still effectively able to work on my base building without affecting my progress.
As an amateur, when it comes to the science here, I took as gospel the philosophy Steve House and Scott Johnston pitched and the strict emphasis to not touch Z3. I think some of my thoughts are just fragments of that old paradigm and the old tools that I’m trying to unlearn.
I’ve had one run on this so far and honestly I didn’t even look at the watch after the initial 5min of data from Zonesense, I just ran with my feeling of what felt like an appropriate effort and the results aligned with how I was feeling. So I’m definitely convinced here.
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@Brad_Olwin said in Suunto ZoneSense:
During long training runs and races I can use ZoneSense to ensure I stay within the effort
This is one problem I have with the implementation. Longer runs and efforts are when I ditch the HR belt in favor of either an optical arm band or the watch’s OHR. I’d imagine this is true for most endurance athletes, at least come race day, as having the chest strap on for multiple hours is chafe-city.
I’m quite intrigued by ZoneSense, but a little bummed that I’ll need to strap on the chest monitor to get the benefits. I understand why it’s necessary, though.
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@Brad_Olwin said in Suunto ZoneSense:
@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.
Interesting, thanks !
I was wondering how to use this information on a long trail for example. Staying in the green zone could ensure that you finish the trail without exhausting your resources too early. -
Well, HR by it’s nature is a metric that in respect to the effort you are making has a time delay/lag.
That’s why in cycling power meters are very useful. They show you instantly the power you are outputting and you can level your effort without the danger of either overcooking or undercooking.
Now Suunto is giving us a metric where it has significant time lag in addition to the natural HR time lag.
I can’t imagine looking to the ZoneSense to gauge my effort since it’s evident that when you are starting to ramp up, the metric goes down and totally misleads you.
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@mlakis I dont think zonesense is made for instant action like some TRI bikers / Roadies need (?).
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Hmm, for me real time ZoneSense is not working as good as expected, maybe it needs more time. yesterday on bike, easy ride, 15min into activity with HR and power in Z1 and steady riding I got vo2max measurements ad 117bpm (my max is above 190), and a lot of time in anaerobic. I was aiming for a Z2/aerobic ride, but I was frustrated that I was in yellow/red during warmup, so I went for some efforts just because data was already bad did someone managed to have 2h ride/run only in green?
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@Likarnik Same for me the first time i went for a light walk. Under 100 bpm and it showed yellow. Second time i went for a walk it seemed to have callibrated and shower only green values just as expected
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@Likarnik I believe with metrics like this it’s better to do at least a few runs without looking at it in a real time. Gather data and do a post workout analysis to find out what is going on and if it has some value for you. I think that the worst use case is to change your training because of a data that you don’t know much about (as it is a new concept at least for me). That is definitely a path for an unproductive training. I will give it a chance by doing post workouts analysis and see how it correlates with my perceived exertion, how it behaves under different circumstances etc. Then it makes sense to either use it or discard it:)
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@Zdeněk-Hruška I totally agree with you, but I probably always train unproductive When I feel lazy I run/bike slow, I choose flat route and vice versa when I am hyped or maybe angry/sad. I still manage to get some good results and finish long races. I wonder how good can I be if I start to train smarter maybe with new suunto coach ai recommended workouts… let’s see
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@Likarnik I think that the best way is to “hire” a coach at least for some time. But I understand it’s expensive and not everyone has this opportunity. In my opinion it’s important to educate yourself as much as you can so you know what you are doing and why. Every training session should have a goal you want to achieve (eg. I want to run slow before the next hard session,…). Always listen to your body and use the metrics like HR and maybe even ZoneSense as an additional tool according to which you can calibrate your effort.
I believe that ZoneSense could be another piece of the puzzle but at least for now I don’t know if it’s going to be the ultimate metric. I need to test it on myself to see how it really works and also listen to another people using it (plus I hope there will be more studies on that). I am going to train as before and test how useful it really is before I start to rely on it more -
I am very excited by this new feature! As many of you have already repeated, it certainly needs a few activities before an accurate baseline can be estimated.
Anyway I want to share my first experience from yesterday: I did a power-based 12 km run with 3 km warm up, 6 km in the so-called sweet spot zone (mid-high HR Z3) and 3 km cool down. Zonesense showed pretty much what I expected, green on the first and last part, and yellow in the middle, although it often dropped to green for several seconds even when I was pushing.
What surprised me the most is that post-activity, Zonesense detected my Aerobic Threshold at 146 bpm, whilst a respiratory lab test I did in March put it at 150 bpm. Considering I was a bit fatigued, on full stomach and the relatively high temperature, I find this a good insight. Should it remain stable across several, similar activities, then it represents an indicator for the next ones, but I am a bit afraid that it could vary more, giving a better output based on my conditions on that day, but becoming less relevant for the next one.
One more thought: I don’t find the main data field on the bottom particularly useful. But I love the other ones I can switch through! They are enough for me for not having to switch to my other favourite screens.Now I just wait for the new info to be displayed on SA on MacOs
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First, I really like this feature. Especially because I find it tiresome and complicated to set correct zones. Now I can push myself, e.g. doing a ramp test on my waterrower, and ideally receive two measurements/estimations:
- Anaerobic threshold (AET)
- Aerobic threshold (AT)
Suunto tells me that their zones are derived from percentages of the anaerobic zone in this article and in the app.
So I can now easily define the upper limits of Z4 (AET) and Z2 (AE).
And now I am lost.
ZoneSense told me in my last rowing workout that my AET is at 157bpm and my AE is at 141bpm.
Using the percentages stated in the article, I can derive the following zones:
Z5 158 – whatever
Z4 147 – 157
Z3 140 – 146
Z2 130 – 138
Z1 < 129But the upper limit of Z2 should be AE, yet the measurement/estimation of AE provided by ZoneSense is not 88% of AET as stated in the article. So the 88% is not chiseled in stone? Or ist the dependency between AET and AE more complicated than stated?
Also, the value of AT that is provided in the Progress Widget on the watch differs from the value provided by ZoneSense. Could be OK, because this comes from running and is older. But it puzzles me.
What do you think, I should work with? Should simply adjust the upper limit of Z2 to the AE value provided by ZoneSense?
If so, how often should I adapt my zone boundaries? Yesterday my AE was measured/estimated at 135. So adjusting zones at a daily basis does not seem to be a good idea.
Or should I do what I already do on a regular basis and stress my self in a well defined manner, e.g. by a ramp test or threshold test, take what ZoneSense tells me and let it be for 6 weeks or so?
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@borgelkranz said in Suunto ZoneSense:
ZoneSense told me in my last rowing workout that my AET is at 157bpm and my AE is at 141bpm.
Like all of us, I am in the process of learning where exactly you got the figure in question
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@borgelkranz Hi, percentages exist just to somehow artificially set the zones in the case you don’t have your threshold values. It can give you estimation based on statistical data from the general population. But for the most people it will be probably off.
If you can always work with the threshold values because those are the only values where there are physiological changes in the body taking place. Thresholds change based on a type of your training so everyone can be on a different percentages.