Suunto 7
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@Brad_Olwin Thanks. Have you done the same thing with SA before on its own? If so, while I wouldn’t want you to forgo SA data, wouldn’t VR on its own be a better measure for comparative battery drain? If you’re testing something else, tho’, have at it however. I’m intrigued.
I have done this route many times with SA alone. I will have a very good comparison and report back late Saturday.
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@Michał-Muszyński said in Suunto 7:
Unfortunately Sporty Go does not transfer the GPS track to Strava.
Have you tried other upload options like Peaks or Final Surge? Is there a reason you want to use Sporty Go for runs outdoors as opposed to Suunto’s own app?
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@NickK I ride an MTB bike and on the road, my watch is always on the handlebars, it disturbs me while riding. I used STRYD when running.
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@Michał-Muszyński I see. Yes, lack of external sensors for heart rate and Stryd is a major bummer. I’m still hoping Suunto does something about it.
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Today I did a quick test of two watches - S9 and S7. Calm cycling around the city. GPS quality in S7 same as S9 - SUPER. But heart rate accuracy is poor. In S9 the Wahoo Ticker sensor was connected and in S7 built-in.
I turned on the Sporty Go app connected to Suunto Smart Sensor.I attach two FIT files.
S7.fit S7 Sporty Go + Suunto Sart Sensor.tcx S9 + Wahoo Ticker.fit -
@Michał-Muszyński said in Suunto 7:
I turned on the Sporty Go app connected to Suunto Smart Sensor.
Wait, so was it a separate ride with a sensor and Sporty Go this time I assume?
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@NickK I launched both Sporty Go and Suunto simultaneously. The watch measures the heart rate from the wrist in the Suunto app, Sporty Go used a connected Suunto Smart Sensor
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@Michał-Muszyński said in Suunto 7:
cycling
Often a problem of the kind of the activity and the position of the arm. While cycling the watch must be very tight to stay behind the wrist.
I did some tests with S7 and Spartan Ultra/Polar H10 and I experienced the best results with the S7. Not worth to go out with the H10. Average of heart rate was the same in all activities (mountain biking, calm ride downtown, race with the carbon bike).
My experience. Enjoy your S7! ️
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Often a problem of the kind of the activity and the position of the arm. While cycling the watch must be very tight to stay behind the wrist.
I did some tests with S7 and Spartan Ultra/Polar H10 and I experienced the best results with the S7. Not worth to go out with the H10. Average of heart rate was the same in all activities (mountain biking, calm ride downtown, race with the carbon bike).
My experience. Enjoy your S7!While cycling the watch must be very tight to stay behind the wrist.- - it’s uncomfortable for me.
I will do bike tests and check. I drive Enduro, I tried to use the built-in sensor on the watch S9 and S5 and the difference was large compared to Wahoo TICKR
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@Michał-Muszyński said in Suunto 7:
tests
For me the S7 is the best of all Suunto watches with OHR. I sold Spartans with OHR and S9. All of these didn’t work good for me while cycling. The first one is S7, no idea why.
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@pilleus I’m not saying that this watch is bad, but in relation to S9 and S5 it is a step back for me. Lack of functions from the Suunto ecosystem means that it does not meet my expectations. The pros it has are not big enough that I would be able to accept the cons.
I exercise regularly at the gym with ketles, a barbell, the watch bothers me. In winter I go to Fatbike, I can’t see anything under my winter clothes.
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@pilleus The OHR sensor is different, not the one used in SSU or S series watches.
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@Brad_Olwin said in Suunto 7:
@pilleus The OHR sensor is different, not the one used in SSU or S series watches.
I know, may be that the lifeq works better than the other ones in Spartans or S9B.
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@pilleus It works much better. I have a lot of Pilates, running and SkiMo where the S7 OHR matches the belt on my S9. The S7 even works well for the running intervals I do. Now to solve the problem for biking…
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@Brad_Olwin How was the battery life with ViewRanger on S7 during your w/e SkiMo?
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@Fenr1r btw I was very confused with VR didn’t know if it used phone GPS / DATA or working as a solo app…
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@Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos Darn. If you don’t know, what hope is there for us mere mortals? I guess if @Brad_Olwin left his phone at home and lost fix just after clipping his skis on … we’ll find out.
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@Fenr1r just for the info , it consumed (if I did things right and also with my phone arround) about 3% for 30mins walk. The screen would go black with the VR logo. So there is some battery saving there
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@Fenr1r but that 3% is suspiciously low.
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@Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos “suspiciously low”: as in “doing nothing except Bluetooth”? Plausible:
From the Wear OS VR instructions: BUY A CASIO PRO TREK. Kidding. Actually “If you wish to force the watch to use its own GPS chip, rather than the Android phone, turn off Bluetooth.” There will be battery consequences from not using the phone’s GPS, you are warned frequently.