Suunto 9 Peak (review and specs)
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 @dimitrios-kanellopoulos You’re right. Maybe it is interesting for downhill kayaking (or how is that sport called?) 
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 @surfboomerang The green line between the data fields is the progress bar of your target distance/duration. I think this was implemented at least a year ago  Edit: damn, too late  
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 @bulkan this will become better 
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 @inkognito Thanks anyway  
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 @surfboomerang is the same data and course. But looks like it will be improve. 
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 @bulkan yeah at the moment the alti profile on the Peak is a bit flattened, probably due to difference in screen size. 
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 @surfboomerang said in Suunto 9 Peak (review and specs): @dimitrios-kanellopoulos You’re right. Maybe it is interesting for downhill kayaking (or how is that sport called?) White water kayaking. The problem there is you get a lot of water on the sensor, sometimes submerging it etc. 
 You still get a good idea of the altitude profile and that is the reason why it makes sense to keep altitude data for kayaking. This is the way it is 
  
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 @egika I have to check with the S9P sensor and water. To me it looks it works better as the sensor doesn’t get water stuck in 
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 @egika yes, what I would do is similar to what already happens with other sports such as MTB, where you have different specializations. When choosing Kayaking I would like to have two profiles: flat water, white water. 
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 @dimitrios-kanellopoulos the screenshot above is from S9 - i am happy with this given the challenging conditions 
 @isazi : good idea 
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 @egika 
 for white water kayaking uphills could be filtered and maybe there’s a reasonable algorithm to detect submerging the watch: unless you take a huge waterfall drop, there’s no reason to suddenly rise the pressure.
 Maybe it sounds a bit ignorant as rivers follow a certain topography and I bet some kayakers would like to record this, too… but what if only start and end alti is recorded and delta is the descent?
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 @freeheeler said in Suunto 9 Peak (review and specs): for white water kayaking uphills could be filtered and maybe there’s a reasonable algorithm to detect submerging the watch: unless you take a huge waterfall drop, there’s no reason to suddenly rise the pressure. we do do that. But water sticks and influsences 
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 Last update and charge of the watch was 6 days exactly ago, the morning of 26th May. - All on (24/7 tracking etc) except notifications. Standbylight always on, on adoptive mode. No raise to wake as it’s not needed for this config.
- White watchface
- 4h of GPS with Gallileo (consumes more than GPS only)
- 2 FW update on the 26th and 28th of the month (transfer FW via BT + install )
- Several checks on the watch and playing around for pics etc
- DND from 22pm to 8am
- Several pairings with SA due to development
 I am now at 29% battery left  I suppose its good. 
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 @dimitrios-kanellopoulos how often does sensor check daily heart rate, every second or within certain time interval? 
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 @dulko79 some time interval not every second. I dont know the specifics but it should be around 5-10mins. It does have somewhat a cleverness there. Also it will change this a bit in the future. 
 But I dont think that OHR is the main drainage in battery on the s9P.
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 @dimitrios-kanellopoulos cleverness, like if you are sitting still at the desk working, then you get up and start walking. Peak then changes sampling rate for hr based on movement? 
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 @dulko79 Unfortunately I dont know the specifics. What I do know is that atm there are a few features missing. For example “sensing” that the watch is not worn / tight (sensor skin contact). That should come asap. 
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 @dimitrios-kanellopoulos 
 brilliant   
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 Question about OTA that comes to me : 
 If SA becomes the only way to upgrade S9P, and something went “wrong”, is there similar workaround like with Suuntolink drag’drop FW file? 
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 @dimitrios-kanellopoulos said in Suunto 9 Peak (review and specs): I am now at 29% battery left YOU should be at 100 %! Life is short and every moment matters …    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






