Like for many other limitations that were hardware limits in previous watches (number of S+ apps and guides, maximum length of an activity, and so on), some are remaining from the old models. I will report this to Suunto.
@duffman19 yeah I definitely think their background elevation data is pretty off. It doesn’t line up with the elevation markings on their own topo maps. The top elevation on the climbing guidance is always below that their own topo map says, and what my verticals barometer says when I’m there. Which makes it kind of useless if you don’t know that the climb is actually 100meters or more than the climbing guidance says
Agreed also. Every single time, I have to go and set it to off, it’s really annoying. I don’t want that extra screen, especially a breadcrumb for 90% of my runs which are around the house.
@Jiri-Kroutil My Solar Ti is working fine on this firmware. No altitude issues. However, I live at ~1600 m and between work and home is ~200 m change. My runs typically have 300m or more elevation gain and SkiMo closer to 1000m where I am usually at 3500-4000m. When my altitude at home or work is incorrect I really don’t care. What matters to me is elevation gain/loss while working out. When I do an exercise at home or work FusedAlti corrects to the right altitude but we have very strong weather and that can change in a day or less. Absolute altitude at home or work just isn’t that important to me.
@isazi thats great news 👍🏻😃. I can live with the flaws in resources and as a „long time“ metric I find it quite useful. I am looking forward on what Suunto is developing. The development of app and the new features in the Vertical are really amazing!
I just wanted to tell @GiPFELKiND that the resources „jumps“ are nothing new here 😅
@isazi yes. I think we mean the same. I only use manual waypoints when creating a route and rarely have TBT on. But I never used „official“ POIs. Maybe I should try it out once ☺️