S9 v. 2.4.14 GPS performance and practical questions it raises
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@paradize Yes, I’ve seen it. But the takeaway from that video was that all watches but Apple Watch Series 4 weren’t good at open water swimming me thinks, at least for DCR. His Girl fared way better. Though as DCR pointed out, it has less to do with GPS performance per se, and more with algorithms. Or Sony chipset bugs as indeed, both Suunto 9 and Vantage V displayed surprisingly similar behavior for two distinct platforms…
Now, I love Apple Watch and kudos for getting things so tight, but my Suunto 9 easily lasts 4-5 days on a single charge with hours of GPS training and OHR and produces data I can export anywhere. Not to mention it looks solid like a rock and can probably survive a nuclear war. Oh, and it has buttons that are easy to press even when wearing gloves
I’m not sure Apple Watch would ever become a serious training tool. Not because Apple can’t, but because Apple doesn’t want to. That’s not their core competence.
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@Luís-Pinto I know. Except there’s nowhere in the settings (like with Polar or Garmin) to use footpod for pace/distance as opposed to FusedSpeed or GPS.
My understanding is that FusedSpeed would use a footpod data if it is connected, but it will be one of the inputs. Not the sole input. I think the only way to force Stryd to be a sole provider is to turn off GPS, which kind of defies the purpose.
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My understanding is that FusedSpeed would use a footpod data if it is connected, but it will be one of the inputs. Not the sole input. I think the only way to force Stryd to be a sole provider is to turn off GPS, which kind of defies the purpose.
@NickK No that is not true
If you turn off autocalibration then the Speed/Distance will come from Stryd only and GPS will only be used to carve the track.
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@NickK I see your point. We have never really been clarified by Suunto if the Fusespeed works with the footpod or is deactivated from the moment the footpod is connected to the watch.
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@Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos Thats my notion too. I always put stryd with autocalib off. Because with autocalib on, the gps enter in action for pace and distance and in consequence Fusedspeed.
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@Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos said in S9 v. 2.4.14 GPS performance and practical questions it raises:
I have a main device, my S9, that I love
There! Can I second this opinion?
and the rest sit most day on a desk on a wooden branch like here
Man, and I was thinking something was wrong with me and was going to sell my collection. Now let me proudly grab a similar wooden branch my wife will probably kill me with, once she realizes just how many Suunto, Polar, and Garmin units have been conveniently stuffed in various drawers.
Regarding the main device:
- Is on the non GPS optimal hand (right)
Can you elaborate on that? Why it’s not GPS optimal? Because right is dominant? (I happen to wear my Suunto 9 on the right hand too but mostly because I’m ambidextrous and tend to prefer right for watches)
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@NickK said in S9 v. 2.4.14 GPS performance and practical questions it raises:
Can you elaborate on that? Why it’s not GPS optimal? Because right is dominant? (I happen to wear my Suunto 9 on the right hand too but mostly because I’m ambidextrous and tend to prefer right for watches)
Exactly the same reason I wear it on right. My problem is also that my right-hand does have a black tattoo and I get the tatoogate thingy and even Vantage cannot get the OHR. They just don’t report any values.
Back to the question about why I can list a few reasons such indeed the dominant hand that moves a lot more but most importantly it’s the side of your body that you tend to have cover at roads and trails.
As used in our society we walk to the right side of the payment for example. In this case, our hand is covered more bu obstacles such as building etc. Same happens when on the trail and you have the trees on one side.
Of course, you could change the way you walk or run and then it wont be at the “bad” arm but then again, now you know why I call the right “bad”.
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@Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos You are blowing my mind today! My only concern is while Stryd pace is pretty good, it is less accurate for me for walking, jogs, and low paced, easy runs. So, ideally I’d prefer a manual calibration over a known distance, combined with ability to drive by Stryd once it has been calibrated.
Still worth a try… Thanks a lot!
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@NickK In past already made a suggestion to Suunto support to put footpod manual calibration for Spartan. I think Ambit 3 have that.
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@Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos said in S9 v. 2.4.14 GPS performance and practical questions it raises:
@Frédéric-Fiandino @Brad_Olwin should describe the collection hehe. Small Suunto museum almost.
It is true…A Suunto museum. If @Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos wore them all he would be up to his armpits in watchbands
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@NickK said in S9 v. 2.4.14 GPS performance and practical questions it raises:
@Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos You are blowing my mind today! My only concern is while Stryd pace is pretty good, it is less accurate for me for walking, jogs, and low paced, easy runs. So, ideally I’d prefer a manual calibration over a known distance, combined with ability to drive by Stryd once it has been calibrated.
Still worse a try… Thanks a lot!
I think the Stryd is very accurate in all of those scenarios. They have worked very hard on incorporating power hiking into the Stryd. I helped beta test some of that as they are only 5k down the road from where I work. Autocalibrate off is better than calibrating over a known distance as your foot movement will change depending on walking, running etc.
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@Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos said in S9 v. 2.4.14 GPS performance and practical questions it raises:
…and even Vantage cannot get the OHR.
seriously, U got one?
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@paradize No I do not own one but I have putted on my wrist. OHR looked accurate and fast (some watches change slow) but still it did not work over tattoo. I did not test it.
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The GPS accuracy seems to be hit or miss. I had a run done yesterday under dense tree cover and it seemed to work great yesterday, but other times, it usually misses the turns. May have to bring out the ol-Ambit3 Peak for a comparison.
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@NickK with his swimming style none of device is going to show good data
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@SlaSh Apple Watch did. Wait! You don’t consider it a sports device Riiiiiiiight!
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@NickK said in S9 v. 2.4.14 GPS performance and practical questions it raises:
@SlaSh Apple Watch did. Wait! You don’t consider it a sports device Riiiiiiiight!
Hm. Apple pays more than Garmin now.
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I am quite sure, if Sony fixes the thing with the GPS turning off, Suunto will perform very good in water! At least as good as the Apple Watch or the 935 (which was in the buoy!).
I did not watch every second of the clip, but does he say at which firmware which watch is running?
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@paradize said in S9 v. 2.4.14 GPS performance and practical questions it raises:
Hm. Apple pays more than Garmin now.
But strangely, only for open water I don’t know how, but it has to do something with reptiloid conspiracy!
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@paradize said in S9 v. 2.4.14 GPS performance and practical questions it raises:
I did not watch every second of the clip, but does he say at which firmware which watch is running?
Nope. No firmware/software versions, though he’s fairly careful to use latest official ones or whatever firmware he’s given by manufacturers to use in his tests. Give a man credit where a credit is due!