Suunto 7
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Some day ago, I realised this layers over. Has anybody same problem?
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@macdav Naštěstí ne 🤨. Fortunately not 🤨.
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@macdav This is showing that there is a screen underneath this one as the overlay is a settings screen. There is nothing wrong here that I see.
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Some day ago, I realised this layers over. Has anybody same problem?
It shouldn’t look like that. It looks pretty much like a burn-in.
@brad_olwin said in Suunto 7:
@macdav This is showing that there is a screen underneath this one as the overlay is a settings screen. There is nothing wrong here that I see.
Overlay of what over what? This below looks like a Solstice watchface.
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@isazi That is interesting that you owned many Garmin devices. Thanks for sharing that. What made you move to Suunto?
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@patrick-löffler long story short, every new Fenix had more problems than the previous model, so after the Fenix 5 I bought an Instinct, GPS tracks were meh, the altimeter pretty bad, and one of the buttons broke. So while waiting for a replacement and having to move to a different continent for a while I bought a S9 baro. The ease of use and precision made me stay with Suunto after that.
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@isazi Thank you for your answer. Regarding features Garmin wins. E.g. fall detection, nightly SPO2 tracking, easy changing and syncing data over several watches… but the actual usage is somehow more pleasant and more motivating with Suunto. I am very surprised because I never had Suunto on my radar. I enjoy it a lot too. One point actually are also the people in the forum. Seems Suunto has a good crowd! And it seems there are some features in the making which could lead up to being closer to Garmin regarding features.
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@patrick-löffler probably not enough users so central limit theorem doesn’t apply XD.
(Basically independent of distribution adding independent variables = amount of “friendly” users approaches normal distribution for amount of variables -> infinity)
I’ve noticed it in smaller communities compared to larger ones. -
Unfortunately this is the state of wearable technologies in 2021
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@steff Smartwarch wearable technology, you should add With love from Google and Qualcomm.
Garmin Enduro, COROS Vertix, and even Suunto 9 Peak beg to differ!
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@patrick-löffler said in Suunto 7:
@isazi nightly SPO2 tracking,
You can do 24/7 SpO2 and see your Fenix 6 turn into Apple Watch
easy changing and syncing data over several watches…
Sadly, training load doesn’t sync fully from watch to watch, only the summaries. So, if you train with one watch, then switch to another, there will be a break in your 7-day loads (and you still have to select a specific watch if you want to see it in the app). Neither does Body Battery sync between watches.
For practical purposes, multi device sync is still a work in progress.
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@steff
It’s funny, I remember a number of years ago when I was running a 100km race and I had to take a little battery bank with me (as did everyone else). Nobody thought much of getting to the 60-80km mark and having to plug in and charge our watches back upNowadays runners and endurance athletes won’t even consider a watch unless it has at least 20+ hours of battery life! Have to ask how many of them actually need that amount for their training and racing
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@miniforklift said in Suunto 7:
Nowadays runners and endurance athletes won’t even consider a watch unless it has at least 20+ hours of battery life! Have to ask how many of them actually need that amount for their training and racing
I think it’s not just the race though. Longer GPS battery life means longer life, period. More time between charges even with heavy training. Should you displace your charging cable while in a faraway land, your watch continues to function because it has all the juice it needs.
We are surrounded by devices nowadays, each with their own set of little routines. The fewer routines the better I’d say. Roam free! So, yeah… I love myself some battery life.
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@nickk
Absolutely agree with you on this.
I charge once a week whether I need to or not (can be anywhere between 40 -60% depending on how much tracking I do), but not having to worry about whether I need to or not makes such a huge difference.
Take the S7 which has up to 18hrs of tracking, or 2 days normal battery life. If go out for a 3/4hr session you are going to have to charge the following morning and it can be touch and go if you need to do another 2/3/4 hr session prior to recharging. It is really nice not always having to worry/think about whether you have sufficient battery or not, and I would agree that for me that is definitely the main driver more than the fact that I can track for 66hrs continously (before using extending power save modes) - which I am likely to only use a couple of times in my life. -
Personally (and this is just my opinion) I don’t get the fuss about charging smartwatches. We all adapted from charging our old Nokia feature phones one every three years to charging out smartphones every two hours (obvious exaggeration, but I’m just making a point) and now it is the norm. We accept it, because a smartphone does significantly more than a feature phone.
It is the same with smartwatches. They do WAY more than a traditional timepiece, and a fair bit more than a typical Garmin/Coros/Sunnto, etc. And with a bright AMOLED screen. Of course the battery won’t be as good.
For me, I don’t wear my watch when I shower, so I pop it on the charger whilst I shower and do my usual morning routine.
If I’m not doing GPS tracking activities I can do this every two days and it keeps it more than topped up. If I’m doing long GPS tracking (long for me is anything over 90 minutes) then I’ll need to top it up daily.Essentially, any time I take my watch off (which is usually only when I shower) it gets a top up. It’s easy, fast, and doesn’t disrupt my workflow at all. And ensures my S7 is always topped up. I’ve been doing this pretty much since day one and it has not yet affected the battery.
(I even take my S7 camping and top it up with a power bank whilst I ‘shower’ with a wet wipe. Easily lasted me through a four day music festival last month).
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@metalmi said in Suunto 7:
Some day ago, I realised this layers over. Has anybody same problem?
It shouldn’t look like that. It looks pretty much like a burn-in.
@brad_olwin said in Suunto 7:
@macdav This is showing that there is a screen underneath this one as the overlay is a settings screen. There is nothing wrong here that I see.
Overlay of what over what? This below looks like a Solstice watchface.
I agree with @Metalmi that this loks like OLED screen burn in.
@macdav do you have the AoD turned on?
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@olymay Yes,
I have Solstice watch face. I tried to switch to Heat map, but unfortunatelly, under is still burned some signs from Solstice -
@olymay Honestly, I don’t see why we should accept short battery life any more than we should accept poor GPS accuracy.
It’s true the smart- and sports watches do more, but it’s also true they cost way more compared to regular time pieces that aren’t Rolex. And unlike regular time pieces, they don’t last a lifetime. Sometimes they lose functionality even when their battery is still kicking strong I hear…
Ever heard a sad tale of Ambit The Shortlived cut down in his prime at the battle of Movescount?
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@nickk said in Suunto 7:
@steff Smartwarch wearable technology, you should add With love from Google and Qualcomm.
Garmin Enduro, COROS Vertix, and even Suunto 9 Peak beg to differ!
Yes, I missed to mention “smartwatch” wearable, and yes, I was referring only to smartwatches, not to dedicated sports watches.
Here I blame only Google, I don’t even blame Qualcomm.
Look what happen with the Google - Samsung colab, where with a newer and more efficient CPU, the battery life in WearOS 3 decreased compared to Tizen.@miniforklift said in Suunto 7:
@steff
It’s funny, I remember a number of years ago when I was running a 100km race and I had to take a little battery bank with me (as did everyone else). Nobody thought much of getting to the 60-80km mark and having to plug in and charge our watches back upNowadays runners and endurance athletes won’t even consider a watch unless it has at least 20+ hours of battery life! Have to ask how many of them actually need that amount for their training and racing
Yes, on sport watches the battery life increased.
But, on smartwatches, the battery life decreased with every new generation.
The best example here is Samsung.
Their initial Galaxy Watch from 2018 had 4 days stand-by or 10 hours of GPS.
Last year GW 3 can barely get 2 days of stand-by and 6-7 hours of GPS (without sharing GPS with the phone)
This year GW 4 is even worse.Take the S7 which has up to 18hrs of tracking, or 2 days normal battery life.
It will be good to mention in which conditions the S7 can get 18hrs of tracking (10 sec GPS which is useless for slow moving activities, no maps, no interaction with the watch).
Many people (myself included) before buying a product, checks the company forums for users experiences with the product.
Seeing posts like that, without having the product and knowing all the features, will mislead the buyers.I already said in one of my previous posts, that even though I really appreciate how helpful this community is, in many occasions users here tends to exagerate the positive points while overlooking the negative parts.
I noticed this also while briefly checking the S9P topics where the product was shown as the greatest piece of tech in it’s class, with best accuracy and everything, and when reviews started to appear on the internet, many showed that although good, it trails behind the competition in many aspects.
I know you most probably you will not agree with this but this is my opinion -
@nickk oh I agree, I want longer battery life as much as the next customer.
However, there is a small issue of physics that currently stops us having longer lasting batteries (it could probably be achieved, but at vastly increased cost and possibly a reduction in safety.)
At the moment, as battery technology improves, more features and bigger high resolution screens get added.
A smartwatch from 2021 lasts similar to a smartwatch from 2018, despite having better battery tech and a larger battery (same goes for smartphones).I have a plastic fantastic Casio watch which I take sailing and it cost me £10. It can tell the time, run a timer, set an alarm, and has a pretty feeble light. But it is £10.
My Suunto 7 cost £400 new and I have no issue with that. It is a computer on my wrist and it still blows my mind with the things it can do. I’ve no doubt Suunto spent a vast sum of money on the R&D, not to mention sourcing and constructing miniature components is expensive.
So it should cost a hell of a lot more than my Casio (I still love my Casio though!).Should we accept poor GPS accuracy? Most of the time this comes down to software. Consumer GOS is accurate to 10m, so expecting better than this is expecting the impossible. Software can make it SEEM like something is more accurate, but it simply isn’t.
I came to Suunto post Movescount (the S7 is my first Suunto)