Suunto vertical titanum solar - NEVER AGAIN SUUNTO !!!
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@MichalP sorry it did not work for you.
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@MichalP Sorry to hear that doesn’t work for you and I do believe that this can make you angry but I do not know how your post will help the community or the community can help you.
If you have issues and you said that you have photos, put them here and explain your issues. Maybe someone have/has the same issues than you and has found a solution that can help you.
I can’t talk about the peak because I never have had one but regarding the S9B, for me and for a lot of people here and there the OHR in the watch has never work well whilst the SV has been more than acceptable.
@MichalP said in Suunto vertical titanum solar - NEVER AGAIN SUUNTO !!!:
THEREFORE, THE TRAINING ANALYSIS CAN BE THROWN IN THE BIN.
If you want to do seriously training analysis you must use a chest strap (even more now with ZS) or an external sensor, not the watch OHR, in any brand. As an example, Coros recommend using its OHR armband for training not the watch OHR.
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Before my SV I had S9baro and for me the heart rate measurements during day AND sports are much better. For running I use often a chest strap to get proper values, especially for intervall sessions. But every body is different…
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I’m sorry for you that it didn’t work for you and you weren’t successfully helped. As the others have already said, a forum can help with this. However, this 1 star google review does not help anyone here. I can only say from my 9PP and vertical that both have delivered realistic values.
With which device did you compare the values of the watch?
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@MichalP It’s unfortunate the wrist OHR didn’t work for you, but to label Suunto as “bad” because of this is a bit excessive. Wrist-based OHR technology has limitations on all watches. Sometimes it provides decent results, and other times it doesn’t. The wrist is simply one of the least reliable places to measure heart rate.
If accurate HR measurement is important to you, investing in an external sensor, such as a chest strap (like those from Polar or Garmin) or an armband OHR monitor (e.g., Polar Verity Sense or Coros), is essential. Yes, it’s unfortunate that an additional device is necessary. But these external sensors are simply more accurate.
While some watches may perform slightly better for you personally, wrist OHR is limited. It’s more like a convenience feature rather than a precise measurement tool. Relying on a wrist OHR for HR data is akin to using an estimate, regardless of which watch you’re wearing.
It’s nicely summed up here for example: https://www.doctorsofrunning.com/2024/04/monday-shakeout-are-wrist-based-heart.html
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@MichalP I have also noticed higher HR reading at the beginning of an activity and it becomes more accurate after 10 minutes approx.
Here is a tip: launch a HR reading (from widget) before launching an activity. In my case it helps getting more correct HR readings at the beginning of the activity.
Hope it helps you also. -
@MichalP sometimes I have exactly the same thing as that with my race s if my strap is loose. If I make it tight against my wrist then after a minute or two it gives correct reading. (the watch must not be able to bounce around or move).
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To be fair I noticed since last update my Vertical shows 55+ to 60+ hr during training sometimes (same value as sleeping man) I need to take it off completely to lose sensor reading (no hr found) than put it back on hand. Than it goes back to 120-130 Happens pretty often (no tattoo, clean skin, not hair problem, just happens since last update). Right now I’m writing when leaving my bed and It shows 67 so…
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@mando said in Suunto vertical titanum solar - NEVER AGAIN SUUNTO !!!:
sometimes I have exactly the same thing as that with my race s if my strap is loose. If I make it tight against my wrist then after a minute or two it gives correct reading. (the watch must not be able to bounce around or move).
But I’m talking about resting heart rate.
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@MichalP
based on the picture you’re wearing it too low. It looks like it’s actually on your wrist bone -
@sartoric said in Suunto vertical titanum solar - NEVER AGAIN SUUNTO !!!:
@MichalP
based on the picture you’re wearing it too low. It looks like it’s actually on your wrist boneJust what I was about to type
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@MichalP me too… if my strap is not tight i also sometimes get the same 2x resting heart rate.
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@MichalP You may have a bad hardware. Did you reach out to Sunnto support?
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@Outdoorsy said in Suunto vertical titanum solar - NEVER AGAIN SUUNTO !!!:
You may have a bad hardware. Did you reach out to Sunnto support?
More than 1 month in Chech servis and nothing they say is ok.
NO COMMENTS ! …
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@MichalP I believe you have bad hardware as well.
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@MichalP if one applies logic here, there are only actually three possibilities:
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This would be a common problem - a greater number of people would have it and report it here, which is not the case.
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Suunto Service in your country considers doubling the HR measurement ok and not to be a problem and tells You that’s ok and your watch has no problems. Which is of course ridiculous
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Your watch is broken, and Suunto Service in your country tells you it’s not, which I think has happened (what would be bad customer service.)
I don’t know if that’s possible, but have you tried to reach out to Suunto directly (not the Czech Suunto, but the Finnish one)? Maybe they can help you better and look into your problems.
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On a similar note, I have the same but for pace on treadmill. It has started 1 week ago. No software update in the meantime.
So, probably an hardware issue. Maybe. However, this SV is “new”, was replaced by support in last November due to an issue with my original SV.Note, a soft reset doesn’t solve the problem.
Note: a 30min/Km pace is like a baby crawling.
Between hardware issues (like I said, this SV is new, it was replaced under warranty) and software issues, the trust and confidence in the device/brand is getting eroded quite quickly.