Wildly incorrect spiky altitude data
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@stromdiddily
weather changes… we haven’t had that much snow in ages!!
It’s a bit of a drawback that we only have one sensor for measuring. Two sensors or at least channels from different sides would really really help here.
I know that Suunto uses Creo to design watches… maybe I should apply as a designer and give them a hand with the future baro watches
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@freeheeler well, it’s been raining pretty steady where I’m at since…forever lol
I really liked the location of the sensor on the A3P. I am not a fan of the side sensors for this very reason.
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@freeheeler said in Wildly incorrect spiky altitude data:
I know that Suunto uses Creo to design watches… maybe I should apply as a designer and give them a hand with the future baro watches
Don’t go so fast, if there is an opening I’ll apply first…Creo is my friend too.
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@cosmecosta
maybe they need 2 great design engineers -
And then it totally redeems itself. Off by 5 feet at the top of the summit on today’s run.
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I think it is better to just feed all data into tensor flow and give it as much as possible correct keys to learn how to deal with these conditions. I had better experience with S9 when biking than with A3P. Under certain conditions with S9B I have 600m ascent instead of 6m but with A3P I had predictable errors due to wind.
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@lexterm77
did you have A3P set to 1s or 10s recording? -
Always 1s, but regardless if should filter out wild swings in altitude with steady wrist on a bike.
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hi there was a fit file issue export. This is fixed now. Can you validate ?
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SA -> .fit -> TP Upload
Real ascent is 10m stairs at half and then same route back. Route is flat. Recorded with S9B.
Edit:
Pic add -
@lexterm77 is this like this on your suunto app ?
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Yes, the watch recorded it that way, on the outside of my sleeve.
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@lexterm77 yeah then I only can say it can happen. What activity was this btw?
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Running on gravel trough forest, double track. Some downed trees skipped over.