Suunto Race 2 General Discussion
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Battery usage Race 2 = 24h lost 12%. So far I dont worry, battery not calibrated, not drained to 0%
Race much lower, around 7%
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@nicovoim I hope that you are right. Strange no one else has reported it.
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My experience so far with the SR2 Titanium:
- Comfort: This is the first Suunto watch in years where I don’t have any problems with the lugs digging into my wrist bone. It’s very comfortable and feels light weight. The watch is not bouncing around like the SR, because it’s slimmer (I use chest strap, so I don’t wear it too tight)
- Sleeping with it: I don’t feel the watch on my wrist (I use with with a Run strap)
- Screen: It looks great. I really liked the screen of the original SR, but this one is even more readable. There’s hardly any difference in the black of the display itself and the outer ring (if you know what I mean). The extra 0.07" are definitely noticeable, as well as the higher brightness.
- Design: I find it a little boring, the original SR1/SV have more “personality”. It looks like a bigger Race S.
- Buttons: As good as the SR1
- Crown: It’s a little bit smaller than on the SR1 and it works great. Very easy to operate and precise. Also the haptic feedback is good.
- Performance: I don’t see much difference between SR1 and SR2. Both watches are responsive and I don’t see any lags. I haven’t tried maps yet, but I guess this is an area where the SR2 is more performant. There are only two situations where a little lag is noticeable. Scrolling up from the widgets back to the watch face and from the watch face up to the sports profiles. I can live with that. It’s a sports watch not an Apple Watch.
- Sound ist loud enough and vibration is strong enough during training (just like SR1)
- Charging cable: This is finally a user friendly (=working) charging solution, and USB-C!
- Saving workout and sync to app: Seems to me a little bit faster
- GNSS: As perfect as SR/SV
- Wrist HR: Looks reasonable outside of training. I always use a chest strap.
- Battery: Too early to say something. I got it on Thursday, started with 98%. Since then firmware update, 3,5h GPS recordings, 24/7 HR, sleep tracking with HRV, no blood oxygen measurement, always on display, no smartphone notifications enabled. I am at 68% now.
Reasons to upgrade for me have been the new lug design and the bigger screen, and I am very happy with what I got.
For me the main difference between SR1 and SR2 is the improved comfort. Everything else is pretty much the same currently. I would not have upgraded if my wrist bone would be more compatible with the SR1’s lug design.
EDIT: My resources numbers are also far too high. I did a VO2Max session today and 1 hour after this training, I was back at 100%. I am basically recovering 24h/day, which I am unfortunately not in reality.
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Please move this to relevant topic if needed. I can’t find any topic of the software 2.46.4
When using sports app E-Bike commute should´t it be tagged as commute automatically? I does not. I have also under commute enabled to tag commutes automatically
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Is the Race 1 still a good buy at the moment?
I only do walking, gym and cycling. -
@GVW18380 For me, SR1 is an awesome watch. I rarely experience good HR readings with it but for every thing else is great. I used it for nearly 18 months and can’t recommend it enough. Especially if you can grab it at discounted price.
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Are there experiences with the Race 2 AOD display brightness compared to the last AMOLED generation? Is it better readable, e.g. for Cycling where you cannot use Lift to wake?
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When will Race 2 be available for sale in Türkiye?
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@VoiGAS if you use Race 2 or the other AMOLED devices attached to the bike handlebar, then the screen will dim.
As bright and readable it is on the wrist, I would not recommend the mentioned setup as a bike computer replacement on the bars… -
@VoiGAS Since I don´t have the Race 1 anymore and t will be subjective answer. I commute to work and last week we have great weather with a lot of sun and I experience the readability is better in race 2. I have absolutely no problem. I also think the rise to wake is working better.
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@Highlands Having a crap OHR kind of defeats the point of having a sports watch for the casual user doesn’t it?
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@Steven-Hambleton During serious activities I use the H10 strap. During rest/sleep the oHR readings are OK. Besides, I knew very well what I was buying before paying even though I’d love a better oHR. Anyway, that particular watch, IMHO, is one of the best sports/mountain watches money can buy.
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I sometimes wonder how many of Suunto/Garmin/Polar/Coros/etc users do really base their workouts on HR. It is nice to have good HR readings but if you do not base you training on that… it is not really important.
I’ve been running and planning my runs since 2007, and I’ve never used heart rate for anything other than just checking the readings out of curiosity.
Just another opinion on this
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@Luis-Andés-Olmedo To each their own, all of my workouts are planned around HR
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@Elipsus said in Suunto Race 2 General Discussion:
@Luis-Andés-Olmedo To each their own, all of my workouts are planned around HR
Then for you HR readings are really important
About 15 years ago (or so), I tried to switch from pace-based training to heart rate-based training, but I didn’t succeed. My heart rate never matched my feelings, so I decided to go with my feelings and my pace.
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@Luis-Andés-Olmedo I would never base my training purely on HR but I mostly use pace. But for that to work you need to know your current training status/lactate threshold pace which is sometimes quite hard if you come out of a phase without valuable race times. If you train multiple years while also taking a deep look into your heart rate during whole training periods (build-up, peak, recovery), after sickness and injuries, you can see a lot of patterns that give you very valuable information on your training stress, performance status, recovery status. For me accurate HR values during training and also sleep/rest periods are therefore very important as they allow me to better control volume/recovery and also paces and to verify my subjective perception by objective values.
As it is so important for me, I would never rely on OHR during training and always use a HR belt. But reliable OHR is essential for daily HR and HRV information (sleep/rest) and therefore needs to accurately work. -
@brave_dave said in Suunto Race 2 General Discussion:
But reliable OHR is essential for daily HR and HRV information (sleep/rest) and therefore needs to accurately work.
Different users, different use cases. It was not my intention to criticize others, just to express my opinion and see how important is HR for others
I never use the watch to sleep, I have all metrics and readings related to health and training status disabled, or I’m simply not interested in them.
When I am tired or stressed I tend to know it. When I need more rest or recovery, I also tend to know it.
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@Luis-Andés-Olmedo said in Suunto Race 2 General Discussion:
@brave_dave said in Suunto Race 2 General Discussion:
But reliable OHR is essential for daily HR and HRV information (sleep/rest) and therefore needs to accurately work.
Different users, different use cases. It was not my intention to criticize others, just to express my opinion and see how important is HR for others
I never use the watch to sleep, I have all metrics and readings related to health and training status disabled, or I’m simply not interested in them.
When I am tired or stressed I tend to know it. When I need more rest or recovery, I also tend to know it.
That said, I will probably go for the Race 2
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@Luis-Andés-Olmedo I didn’t see it as a criticism, I just wanted to highlight that physiological values can be really important and that own perception can be totally wrong or useless sometimes. If you train on a high performance level for some years, you realize that sometimes you feel mentally exhausted or stressed but your body is ready. Other times you are totally motivated but your body needs rest or less training stress because you have an subtle or upcoming infection or motivation caused overreaching. If you learn to interpret these physiological values, they can really improve your training.
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@brave_dave said in Suunto Race 2 General Discussion:
@Luis-Andés-Olmedo If you train on a high performance level for some years, you realize that sometimes you feel mentally exhausted or stressed but your body is ready. Other times you are totally motivated but your body needs rest or less training stress because you have an subtle or upcoming infection or motivation caused overreaching
I know :). After years of pace/feelings based training you also learn to detect those conditions. Sometimes you realize when you’ve already started the workout and need to adapt…
Maybe it is too old-style but for me having to pay attention to all of those metrics always increased my stress levels instead of helping me to train better.
But yes, I agree, if you base you training on HR, for sure it is important to have accurate readings. That is why I wrote “I sometimes wonder how many of Suunto/Garmin/Polar/Coros/etc users do really base their workouts on HR”.
I believe that many users want accurate HR only to have accurate HR, not because they really analyze and use the readings.