HRV recording consistently scoring 26...
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@TED77 I’ve never had a problem with HRV. It always pinpoints differences perfectly (illness, alcohol, fatigue, excellent fitness, etc.).
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HRV seems to be working for me too, for me abnormal HRV correlates with alcohol, bad nights etc
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How much variance do you get between good and bad nights?
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@TED77 Thank you for mentioning the Elite HRV app. I’ve long had a feeling that those HRV readings from the OHR sensor are highly inaccurate. And it is so! A 9PP was showing HRV in the 20-30 range for my girlfriend, causing some unease as if there is something wrong with her cardiovascular system. But Elite HRV is showing that the actual value for her is 60+ putting her in the upper half for her age group. For me the gap is smaller, but on certain days the watch is way off. I’m now using the watch only to track my workouts. A two year practice has shown it’s misleading for anything else.
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@maszop It could also be that the watch is telling you are fatigued and you start feeling fatigued. This is a very slippery territory. I wager that the same athlete on a race day, one with a watch telling him he is fatigued and one with a watch telling him he is in excellent shape, will show different race time. A fitness watch can play tricks on people without them even noticing it. It’s called placebo effect, and it’s absolutely real.
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@cheetah694 Even a small beer shows up in my HRV results. Or I even notice signs of a cold before I even realize it.
As for the EliteHRV comparisons, they’re pointless and you’re drawing the wrong conclusions. They’re not measuring the same thing.
Of course, that doesn’t mean it works perfectly for everyone. It works very well for me. -
@maszop Heartbeat is heartbeat. Heartrate variability is heartrate variability. It’s only that EliteHRV gives you the real number and the watch gives you a calculated approximation with an obscure formula. The comparison is not pointless. It shows how off the watch is from what it is supposed to show. You don’t have to act like a Suunto support clerk here. If the watch is not consistent for many people, then that’s just how it is. Everyone here has access to Google, Wiki, ChatGPT etc. and can figure out what is what easily.
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@cheetah694 Maybe you should read about what, when and how is measured instead of engaging in pointless discussions.
And not in ChatGPT, but in the documentation.
And I am probably the last person on this forum who can be called a Suunto support clerk.
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@cheetah694 said in HRV recording consistently scoring 26...:
@maszop Heartbeat is heartbeat. Heartrate variability is heartrate variability. It’s only that EliteHRV gives you the real number and the watch gives you a calculated approximation with an obscure formula. The comparison is not pointless. It shows how off the watch is from what it is supposed to show. You don’t have to act like a Suunto support clerk here. If the watch is not consistent for many people, then that’s just how it is. Everyone here has access to Google, Wiki, ChatGPT etc. and can figure out what is what easily.
The HRV score from eliteHRV is not measured in milliseconds. It is their own defined unitless score and is not comparable to Suunto’s HRV rmssd measurement.
Attached is the definition of the eliteHRV score (from their FAQ)

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I came here to say that measuring 26 (or any other number) every night sounds like a bug and should not happen, so probably should reach out to Suunto about that or try some other tool/watch to test it.
On the discussion part, I think it is common knowledge by now, that only reliable HRV measurement is in the morning and slightly worse but still reliable is overnight. And does not matter which number it is or what units it is used as (might be carrots per bucket), only trends matters.
I checked ads for eliteHRV app, so much nonsense haven’t seen for quite some time, a lot of “readiness score/stress level/prevent illness” type of things, that has 0 scientific proof. -
@TED77 said in HRV recording consistently scoring 26...:
@maszop said in HRV recording consistently scoring 26...:
@TED77 You’re measuring and comparing two different things. Hence the discrepancies.
Instead of wasting time on pointless comparisons, read up on how (and what) is measured and displayed in both apps.
Please explain your rationale of how they are completely different things? I’m very aware of what hrv is so no need for your patronising approach.
Just my two cents: You can “block” users, so you don’t waste time on rude and arrogant answers