From Suunto to another brand, and back to Suunto. My experience :)
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@Brad_Olwin Oh yes, Iām really back very recently, and yes Iāve seen the barometer trend! Appreciated it, this would have been by 5th point Above I rather mean the graph with the barometer āprofileā, I correct to make more clear. Thanks
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@pacos said in From Suunto to another brand, and back to Suunto. My experience :
@Brad_Olwin Oh yes, Iām really back very recently, and yes Iāve seen the barometer trend! Apprecieted it, this would have been by 5th point Above I rather mean the graph with the barometer āprofileā, I correct to make more clear. Thanks
On the new watchface there is a graph of sorts, the barometer trend is shown in a lighter color so I think what you asked for is there. Barometer trend arrows that show last 3h change and the values in a half circle showing the current pressure vs. past pressure (light color vs. dark color).
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@Brad_Olwin mmmh interesting so are there any documentation that youāre aware somewhere of this new watchface, looks like Iām not clear on the functioning so! Thanks
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Hey thanks for this post.
Just for my own questioning , since fusedtrack provides up to 40h of running (if I recall correctly) those 20+h matter so much ?
Just wanna know why on a 40h run a precice pace is needed (1s resolution).
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Hello @Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos, mountain trail races of 100 miles or 170km (like UTMB) may have time limit for āhumanā runners longer than 40 hoursā¦ UTMB is 46 hours for example (and my SB9 last year died aaargh! as I used the map)
In long trail run naturally 1sec resolution is not needed for precision, but looks like BEST gps is needed to use the map or the altimeter profile which are very important instead for mountain running.
I also note that in general product specifications such as 40hrs are considered at optimal conditions (i.e. clear sky) while in real conditions you may be in woods, low temperatures, canyon etc etc and battery last lessā¦
Thatās why to me 60hrs at max. resolution of 1 sec would be the perfect specification for every use
Thanksnote:
Itās also true that in long running you can bring a power bankā¦ but thatās another story, we like a perfect gear -
I have been a Garmin user for many years (even had a Fenix 6 this year), and I agree with your analysis of the downsides.
Looking at old activities with my Garmins, it seems like they did not implement any altitude filter, or a very low one (maybe 1 meter) on barometric devices. No other way to explain how I can get 60/80 meters of ascent running in my Amsterdam neighborhood. Also, altitude readings on the mountains were hundreds of meters off most of the time.
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Well written. Garmin watches are so stuffed with features that most of users are not even aware of them or do not know what to do with them. Another problem is that more features means more possible bugs. Furthermore, if measured data are bad because sensor is not precise enough then any further analysis with such input data is pointless. To have features supported by bad data just for the purpose of marketing is useless. Suunto should focus on features that can be measured and analysed solidly plus are attractive also for casual athletes not only for super serious athletes.
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@pacos Couldnāt find it in the Suunto manual, but I think @Brad_Olwin is talking about this watchface:
https://www.uhrenundtouren.com/en/the-new-outdoor-watchface-on-the-suunto-9-baro-and-suunto-5/
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@isazi yes, same experience. Spikes on the elevation profile when I started sweating (probably drops in the barometer holes which are in un unfortunate positionā¦ to me a design flaw) that cumulates in hundreds of meters, depending on temperature, in flat run.
Even worst, is that many problems like this look also random among the user community, symptom of a complex architecture (firmware vs hub and hw sensors) not totally under control, and chasing customer claims with patches and fixes while marketing reasons pushes to continuously stack in new features (how can you stay without the SUP activity? ).
Naturally this is just my feeling and take away from the experience, not arrogance thatās the truthā¦ although it shouldnāt be too far
I gave it up to the brand. -
@dulko79 that it is, I agree 100%
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@surfboomerang oh yes, thanks. I read it.
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@pacos got it.
Take a look at this recent discussion here.
https://forum.suunto.com/topic/5571/gps-with-navigation-map/14
Might help for the next utmb.
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@pacos FusedTrack is unreal, you will get tracks that are very similar to 1s fix. I use this on my long races and my long outings. Load a route and waypoints for aid stations, then set in Endurance mode. If you are using an HR belt you should get near 50h, you can also set up a custom battery mode to help maximize battery. I often do not need the screen on all the time in long races so I set the screen to time out, this can save a lot of battery.
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@Brad_Olwin can you set it to time out even in best recording?
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@stromdiddily yes you can. It then can bump up the best performance to something like 40h if not hr or belt is used.
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Iāve been using the same competitor watch (Fenix 6X) since January and wanted to share my take on it compared to Suunto 9.
Strengths compared to Suunto 9:
- Battery life (obviously)
- Maps - overall useful, but somewhat difficult to use when trail running due to not optimal contrast. It feels maps are optimized for hiking rather than running, because maps details are too tiny. There is high contrast option for maps as well as an option to reduce the level of details, but I feel even that isnāt sufficient.
- GPS accuracy - Fenix had better GPS / distance accuracy at the time when I bought the watch in January, but after several updates I think it became less useful for trail running. It seems GPS was tuned to reduce wobbling and increase smoothness which made it quite a bit less accurate on trails. I remember Suunto had done the same in November or December 2019, and at the time that quite irritated me. I donāt know how GPS accuracy compares now.
- Vertical ascent/descent accuracy is better for me on Fenix. Suunto algorithm is way too conservative.
- Customizability - Fenix UI is quite complicated, but the flip side of that is that everything, literally everything can be customized. And that can be done in a middle of an activity while not interrupting recording. If you donāt like screen layout or data fields, that is actually quite easy to fix. Also Fenix supports mixed units, and units can be customized for most major metrics separately, which I quite appreciate. Also many things can be customized separately for day and night. Also different options can be customized separately for different sport profiles.
- I liked the idea of automatically adding a few customizable screens when Navigation is turned on. For example when I start a route navigation, I also automatically get a ClimbPro screen, but also an additional screen that I customized to show name of the next waypoint, distance, and ETA to next waypoint, and I donāt see that screen when there is no navigation.
- Power profiles are more flexible than on Suunto 9.
- Fitness features are implemented quite a bit better than in Suunto, and integration with the app is better.
- Much more flexible API which allows custom apps, widgets, and custom data fields.
- 5 physical buttons
- Screen contrast and readability is better on Fenix (this is comparing sapphire Fenix to sapphire Suunto 9)
- Garmin Connect App is more polished.
- Website.
- Integration with Strava - for example a Strava route can be automatically synced to Garmin by just starring it on Strava.
- Strava live segments, although the implementation is messy
- Ability to access the watch storage directly via USB and not depend on software to download activities or upload routes.
Suunto 9 strengths compared to Fenix 6X:
- Style - Suunto are better looking watches.
- Instant pace is far more accurate on Suunto 9. Instant pace is borderline unusable on Fenix 6 when running on trails - super unstable and biased towards slower than actual pace by 0:45-3:00 mile/min.
- I like Suunto button layout better
- Zooming map/navigation screen is cumbersome on Fenix. Suunto did that better.
- Directional arrows on navigation route are quite useful on Suunto 9, especially when going off route and re-joining route again. Fenix doesnāt have that.
- I really disliked that that on Fenix 6X button lock prevents changing data screens. Suunto did that better.
- Out of box the Fenix 6X UI was quite messy, which tons of popups and data screens changing seemingly randomly on their own. It was difficult to figure out. Fortunately the watch allowed to turn off or disable all of that. Suunto UI is more streamlined, especially when in activity mode. Although to be honest, I liked Ambit UI even better.
- I really disliked the way turn-by-turn instructions on Garmin make user waypoints unusable. Basically, turn-by-turn instructions are auto-generated by Garmin Connect when uploading any route and cannot be disabled, but they are implemented as waypoints, which makes my own waypoints not usable. And on trails the watch ends up giving your turn notifications for every bend of a trail, which is a lot. Fortunately, all of that mess can be bypassed by copying a route directly to the watch via USB. Suunto implementation of waypoints is better.
- Route builder is much better in Suunto App. The mobile version of Garmin route builder is borderline unusable, and the one on website is quite bad too. But Garmin is better compatible with various 3rd party route builders such as plotaroute.
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The funny thing it is,
When you say American outdoor gps brand, Iāll never recall garmin in my head,You should know garmin has another name as the light of Taiwan.
Nowadays the. Marketing is so powerful
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@zhang965 said in From Suunto to another brand, and back to Suunto. My experience :
You should know garmin has another name as the light of Taiwan.
What do you mean? You know sometimes too much stuff :_D
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@zhang965
to be honest i also wondered if Coros was american