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    Suunto 9 Peak HR is SUPER Inaccurate

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Suunto 9 Peak
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    • Grayson BangayG Offline
      Grayson Bangay
      last edited by

      Good morning folks,

      First time posting, and unfortunately out of frustration. Switched from garmin to suunto about 3 months ago. Bought the Suunto 9 Peak for Fenix after lots of deliberation, and wasn’t really disappointed until i started ‘tracking’ workouts that weren’t running or seemingly steady in pace.

      The HR, of course is where this was most noted. Weightlifting, circuit training, sprints, etc, seemed to pull the oddest and most erratic of HR’s. I’m talking, 10 minutes into a core circuit and it’s reading 60 BPM. Weight lifting at 80 BPM’s solid for an hour. (Actual HR was mid 120’s) This happens constantly! I have trouble shot, everything I can. Position of the watch, hard restarts, firmware updates, you name it, I’ve done it.

      An odd thing that does happen, the minute I take the watch off and place it on a table, it reads the HR it should. For example, It’s reading 68 BPM on my wrist - I then take it off, and it climbs over the next minute to 120. What my HR is actually at, since I have a garmin on my other wrist (And it’s reading correctly)

      Haven’t seen anything else online, besides my small inaccuracies people have experienced. Yes, I could just buy a HR chest strap. But, that’s the frustration I shouldn’t have to, if another watch could do this without fail.

      I appreciate anything I may not have thought of, or out of the box ideas!

      Thank you for your time Sunnto community, Grayson

      DMytroD Brad_OlwinB ? 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • DMytroD Offline
        DMytro @Grayson Bangay
        last edited by

        @grayson-bangay I think what the watch reads while lying on a table is a coincidence - it can’t measure HR without having a direct contact with your arm (maybe via software update someday XD).
        As for the accuracy while weight lifting or doing a circuit training - I thought it was a common shortcoming of wrist based OHR sensors, you could maybe try to place your watch higher on the arm or on the inside of your wrist, but other than that I fear it’s not much you can do.

        cs2ndC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • sartoricS Offline
          sartoric Moderator
          last edited by sartoric

          as a general reference there this old but gold post:
          https://www.suunto.com/Content-pages/what-should-you-know-about-wrist-heart-rate2/

          That said, I would expect some inconsistencies for weight lifting but not for running or similar.
          Check that you haven’t tighten it too much.

          I would suggest to search the forum too for the HR topic. There are plenty of discussions about it.

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          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • Grayson BangayG Offline
            Grayson Bangay
            last edited by

            Perfect. Thank you guys.

            Again coming from Garmin, the accuracy and speed of change in HR never seemed to have a problem, or I possibly wasn’t noticing that I care more about these things Ha

            Haha @DMytro Yes, correct! It’s always funny though, that instead of erroring or having dashes come up, it matches without fail, every time, what my HR is currently sitting at. Never above or below! Confirmed again while wearing another watch. As if there’s a 10 second delay…

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • cs2ndC Offline
              cs2nd @DMytro
              last edited by

              @dmytro I believe (and in my experience too) is that there is a delay. I believe the sensor is reading on the second, but the display refresh is delayed. I’d love to be proven wrong though. 🙂

              Suunto Race Ti
              Suunto 9 Peak Ti

              DMytroD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • DMytroD Offline
                DMytro @cs2nd
                last edited by

                @cs2nd that too is a peculiarity of all optical HT sensors, that’s why HR strap is usually better for interval training.

                cs2ndC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • cs2ndC Offline
                  cs2nd @DMytro
                  last edited by

                  @dmytro you are 100% right. I personally religiously use my Polar H10. The issue still remains though, there seems to be a lag/delay with what the SP9 displays. Otherwise, yes, I trust my Polar H10 readings.

                  Suunto Race Ti
                  Suunto 9 Peak Ti

                  DMytroD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • DMytroD Offline
                    DMytro @cs2nd
                    last edited by

                    @cs2nd how bit of a delay are you experiencing? And how do you know that it’s a lag in the first place?
                    For example, if I climb a hill, my HR doesn’t elevate for the first few seconds either, but I am quite confident that it’s due to physiological reasons and not just a signal delay.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • Brad_OlwinB Offline
                      Brad_Olwin Moderator @Grayson Bangay
                      last edited by

                      @grayson-bangay I don’t care which one you have, Garmin, Suunto, Polar, Coros, TomTom, Apple, etc. The optical HR is just not that good. If you want accuracy use a belt.

                      https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28538708/

                      Vector/T6c/Ambit 3 Peak/S5 Copper/S3/S7 Ti/S9 baro Ti/S9P Ti/S9PP Ti/Vertical Ti/Race Ti/RaceS/Ocean/Wing

                      jR0n6J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • SimonS Offline
                        Simon Bronze Member
                        last edited by

                        Optical heart rate sensors always have a lag of about 4-5 sec. Not sure, but I believe this is currently a general technical limit for all manufacturers.

                        As for accuracy: You can place the watch much higher up, where your arm is thicker. Or you can use an OHR arm sensor like the Wahoo Tickr Fit. It’s almost/comparable accurate to a chest band sensor, but less annoying. But it also has the 4-5 sec lag. It’s what I’m using and I’m really happy with it.

                        Cheers

                        S9P Ti - ex Altimax, A3P, SV Ti

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • jR0n6J Offline
                          jR0n6 @Brad_Olwin
                          last edited by jR0n6

                          @brad_olwin the link is 2017 which in tech world is like 10 years 🙂

                          If u looking for HR accuracy on wrist Apple Watch 6+ is very close to a chest strap… in my testing overall for a 2 Hour activity my difference to a Polar H9 was 2-3 beats (vs measures min / max)… the only issue is a lag up to 2 seconds…

                          This depends of course on your fit, skin etc…in case u require a scientific test u can refer to:
                          https://youtu.be/0Ub7qmZz9ec

                          P.S. Peak 9 is btw not bad at all for HR (for activities where the watch is not moving a lot…)

                          P.S.2.0 the best alternative if u don’t want to wear a chest strap… Polar Verity Sense, Polar OH1, or the mentioned Wahoo 🙂 in that order…

                          S9P Moss Grey
                          SA beta on iOS

                          Brad_OlwinB SimonS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Brad_OlwinB Offline
                            Brad_Olwin Moderator @jR0n6
                            last edited by

                            @jr0n6 I’ve tested all of the Suunto OHR models as well as Apple Watch 5 and 6. They are about equal for what I do. The Suunto 7 and Apple watches are a tie for me. And IMHO the best belt is the Suunto Smartsensor as missed HR and HR during swimming is synced bac to the watch. The belt can be worn 2-3h without the watch and sync back HR for exercises where one does not want to wear the watch.

                            Vector/T6c/Ambit 3 Peak/S5 Copper/S3/S7 Ti/S9 baro Ti/S9P Ti/S9PP Ti/Vertical Ti/Race Ti/RaceS/Ocean/Wing

                            jR0n6J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • jR0n6J Offline
                              jR0n6 @Brad_Olwin
                              last edited by

                              @brad_olwin swimming is the only thing I did not try yet 🙂 … for me the sensor of the Apple Watch is better but that 1,5 day battery life a no go… and was looking a long time for a watch that I like and the HR sensor is acceptable. S9P at least for me delivers this…

                              S9P Moss Grey
                              SA beta on iOS

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • SimonS Offline
                                Simon Bronze Member @jR0n6
                                last edited by Simon

                                @jr0n6 Tried the Polar Verity Sense. It’s awesome 🙌 Indeed better accuracy and more reliable than the Wahoo. Although the Wahoo is not bad by any means! And it has a longer lasting battery (20 h vs 30 h). Still, for the improved accuracy, I’ve switched to the Polar Verity Sense. Thanks for the hint!

                                S9P Ti - ex Altimax, A3P, SV Ti

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • ? Offline
                                  A Former User @Grayson Bangay
                                  last edited by A Former User

                                  Today first run with my new S9P (all black) via OHR.
                                  I had the idea to test it with my old S9B with my smart sensor.
                                  Holy shit is S9P accurate. I had nearly always nearly same values.
                                  The average HR was exactly the same.
                                  No drops or unplausible high values on S9P…
                                  Amazing! Great job Suunto!!!

                                  It was a steady run. Of course I would expect some difference in generell with every OHR device in compare to HR belt with fast sprints, unsteady sports…

                                  I liked also the avg km pace of S9P.
                                  Didn’t have so much jumps in the beginning of each km.

                                  S9P all the way…

                                  Dimitrios KanellopoulosD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                                  • Dimitrios KanellopoulosD Offline
                                    Dimitrios Kanellopoulos Community Manager @Guest
                                    last edited by

                                    @mountainchris keep in mind that during cold days of winter ohr has flaws due to its nature.

                                    Summer is super accurate

                                    Community Manager / Admin @Suunto
                                    Creator of Quantified-Self.io
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                                    https://instagram.com/dimitrioskanellopoulos
                                    https://www.strava.com/athletes/7586105

                                    ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • ? Offline
                                      A Former User @Dimitrios Kanellopoulos
                                      last edited by A Former User

                                      @dimitrios-kanellopoulos it was 5 degrees. super good! in cold winter I will still use smart sensor. One indicator for me to use OHR is never have cold hands…

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • surfboomerangS Offline
                                        surfboomerang
                                        last edited by surfboomerang

                                        As @Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos says…
                                        Below a certain temperature OHR can become very unreliable but in warmer weather it works perfectly. Just use a strap in the winter for best results.

                                        Warm weather
                                        Screenshot_20220205-120559_Suunto.jpg

                                        Cold weather
                                        Screenshot_20220205-120644_Suunto.jpg

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                                        OnePlus Nord 4

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