Water temperature - how long will it take for correct temperature
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@tuxella … thanks for clarifying … do you know if this changed with the Suunto Ocean?
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@sebchastang Seems you were correct after all! LOL
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@Alejandro I am totally confused now
Could anybody from Suunto answer my question if there is a second temperature sensor in the glass?
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@Gosem
Hi, could really nobody answer the sensor question?Many thanks
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Sorry mistake, I thought you asked for time…
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I’ve used a Suunto EON steel extensively for many years and the temp reading is stable within seconds as soon as you descend. If that is the only thing holding you back, then I think its safe to say that the temp recording on all Suunto dive computers is relatively “instant”. Hope this helps.
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@Alejandro Now is the question if this super fast temperature pick up can be expected of the Ocean as well.
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Yes I understand the question and, in the absence of a response from a SCUBA diver using the SO, I gave my answer based on my experience with an EON steel. Here’s another suggestion: buy it from Suunto direct and send it back for a full refund if it doesn’t meet your needs. Again, I hope this helps.
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@Alejandro Apologies. I was excited by how fast it peaks up temperature based on your experience. So yes. Your experience definitely helps. My question was meant more like: would be so cool if the Ocean had the same capabilities.
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As divers we learn that water is more stable than air in terms of temperature – not to mention that you will lose body heat about four times faster in the water than on dry land. In other words, it’s not that difficult for modern equipment to record fast, accurate temperature under the surface of the water. Hence I’m saying to the other guy just buy it and go diving… Then maybe he can tell us!
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@Gosem Just did a test by dunking my watch into slightly chilled water. Here’s what I got:
It took 40 seconds for the sensor to get from about 29°C to 26°C, and nearly another minute to get from that to the final reading of 25°C. But as you can see from the graph, despite the 25°C reading, it was still equalising the temperature towards the very end of the test.
The test setup:
All sensors are allowed to rest in a shaded and well-ventilated area to be allowed to acclimate to room temperature. The sensors comprise a Suunto Ocean, an Aranet 4, and a Thermapen IR (temperature probe only).Their initial readings just prior start of the test were:
- Suunto Ocean: 29°C
- Aranet 4: 29.2±0.3°C
- Thermapen IR: 29.0±0.4°C
These represent the ambient air temperature. For what it’s worth, the Thermapen IR comes with a calibration certificate dated June 2020 that is traceable to a laboratory-standard thermometer.
I then initiated a custom sport mode for recording temperature and left my watch in slightly chilled water. The initial temperature of the water according to the Thermapen IR was 24.6±0.4°C.
The test ended when I came back from my shower and saw that the watch and the Thermapen IR gave (apparently) the same reading of 25°C.
Hope that helps.
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@kohjl hey , thank you so much for your time and effort, that’s amazing
Unfortunately the result is not what I wanted to hear … I thought they changed the sensor.But thank you so much ️🥳
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@Gosem I’m even more disappointed they didn’t upgrade the HR sensor like they did for the Race S, despite the back-to-back launch with both watches
The hardware is there, but the will is not.
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@kohjl … that’s a pity as well … I don’t understand either. I guess that is because of the special diving certification, which needs a lot of time.
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@Gosem I think so, the ocean watch code is DW223, Vertical was OW222, Race was OW224 and Race S is OW233 (and 9PP was OW211).
So, I think the Ocean project started in 2022 as Vertical and Race, and the Race S OHR wasn’t ready yet. -
@kohjl hi, another idea came to my mind … if you set the watch on diving sport mode, perhaps it will react faster?
If you have time and fun … perhaps you could please try that ️