Fusedalti Source for the Race
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@Brad_Olwin Sorry to butt in, but on my S9PP if I manually set the altitude before an activity and then start one within 15 minutes FusedAlti comes into play correcting the altitude. Does it work differently with SR?
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@Mff73
The “new” fusedalti kicks in and even if it calibrates after a while, its effect is retroactive.On the spartan it doesn’t recalculate the first part and maybe there is another difference I forgot
maybe the fact that if you manual calibrate before the activity, the fusedalti doesn’t start
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@sartoric again (maybe not clear enough what’s written above):
FusedAlti is correcting the altitude if it finds it to be off by more than a certain limit (don’t know exactly the number).
If at the beginning and also later during the activity, the difference is not bigger, nothing will happen.
So if you calibrate manually before the activity, accuracy will be probably good enough to not trigger the correction.If you calibrate to a far off value, it is corrected (like also experienced above).
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@Brad_Olwin Thanks for this information.
I came to Suunto with the Race, after 10 years with Garmin.
I don’t think Suunto emphasises this positive point enough. I think the altimetry is better managed by Suunto, but Suunto doesn’t say it loudly enough.
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When I look at the manual for my Race for the FusedAlti tools, it says :
“FusedAlti provides an altitude reading that is a combination of GPS and barometric altitude. It minimizes the effect of temporary and offset errors in the final altitude reading.
NOTE:
By default, altitude is measured with FusedAlti during exercises that use GPS and during navigation. When GPS is switched off, altitude is measured with the barometric sensor.” -
And when I look at the manual for the Altimeter and Barometer widget, it says, among other things :
" Automatic alti-baro profile: Weather and altitude changes both cause a change in air pressure. To handle this, Suunto Race automatically switches between interpreting changes in air pressure as altitude or weather changes based on your movement.
If your watch senses vertical movement, it switches to measuring altitude. When you are viewing the altitude graph, it is updated with a maximum delay of 10 seconds.
If you are at a constant altitude (less than 5 meters of vertical movement within 12 minutes), your watch interprets air pressure changes as weather changes and adjusts the barometer graph accordingly.
It’s a shame that the two pieces of information aren’t available in the same place, I think that would be beneficial.
And I don’t think there’s any mention of the fact that FusedAlti can update past altitudes if it deems it necessary. I think I’ve understood that’s how it works from what you’ve said.
This is a big difference from Garmin, which will never touch the past minutes of an activity. If you do a loop and come back to the exact same place with a 2000m difference (recorded : +4000d+ and -2000d-) Garmin doesn’t get offended at all ; even if a Garmin function is supposed to manage the altimeter with crazy intelligence…
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