Is the Vertical as sub-standard as it seems?
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Same for me @isazi. At this point, nothing bad happened to my vertical.
I guess it is the case for most of the people.
But we tend to speak and remember only bad experience. -
Not sure about display, I find it very readable. As far as MIP displays go I think its about as good as it gets.
Sleep tracking is useless, step tracking is useless, spo2 is useless and arguably ohr is aswell. Annoying but hey you dont buy a suunto for these (cue argument about why Suunto bothers)
Hardware wise I think the watch is great. GPS is the best ive seen (minus a few suspected software issues)
Barometer as far as I can tell so far is spot on, which is surprisingly difficult to find these days. Garmins is certainly subpar.Software is lackluster and quite disappointed with Suunto slow update rate. Widgets really could do with being sped up and the fatal bugs really do need addressing.
Theyve been releasing buggy watches since the first ambit so don’t excuse this with the “software takes time to test” nonsense. -
@isazi I am in the same boat. The watch has performed flawlessly for me. One map/routing crash before the last update. Daily use. OHR very close to chest strap HR (Polar H10) if I position it on the wrist correctly. Sleep tracking fairly accurate as far as hours slept. SpO2 is correlated with what I get from my AW8.
This is my 5th Suunto and I have had only minor issues with any of them - most occurring around the transition from Movescount when SA was new.
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@larrybbaker good to hear. I don’t really care about OHR as I prefer to wear the Verity Sense or H10. Workouts have been fine but the interval Guides is a mess to be honest. I guess it helps Suunto tick a box but I sincerely hope this is improved. Navigation on maps continue to be a mess if using turn-by-turn. Still no swim drills. Interface very laggy and rather restrictive in many sense. These individually are small but stacking them all up makes me sad, but then this has been Suunto’s story ever since the demise of Movescount. Good if they can improve things but history says otherwise.
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@altcmd What’s the issue with t2t nav and the maps?
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@stromdiddily said in Is the Vertical as sub-standard as it seems?:
@altcmd What’s the issue with t2t nav and the maps?
I guess I would add what is a mess about Interval Guides? Which 3rd party are you using?
The screen lag issue I don’t get, what is the lag problem? I push the button and the screen changes. Is it instantaneous? no, neither is a screen switch instantaneous on my Apple Watch Ultra or on the Garmin Epix2 I owned. I guess I cannot tell the difference between these. When I open an app on my iPhone it is not instantaneous either. So far this has not caused me any harm.
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@Brad_Olwin and @stromdiddily
Guides: perhaps a personal preference but the TP guide target numbers do not show a range but the average point. And if doing a HR interval that is a narrow cross between zones, it is sometimes hard to discern the range one wants to keep. Of course I can remember then but that defeats the purpose of a Suunto guide let alone the watch. Out of range beeps or vibration is also missing.TbT: discussed at length before so will no repeat again. Great if it works for you but I do not believe the navigation prompts Suunto gives is standard and as per what everyone else does on their watches.
Lags: my comparison is not to anyone but since you brought it up, I too have used a few Garmins in the last few years (7, 7S, 955) and the screen hiccups were not so noticeable as they are in Suunto. Again, I don’t care what others do here, but there is a noticeable lag on the vertical that was also the case on 9PP. Of course it does no ‘harm’ but just because Apple isn’t doing split second screen changes does not mean Suunto is in the clear. It’s a bit absurd if, not for the first time, some people have raised the issue and the response is a bit dismissive. Don’t worry, this isnt life threatening
Alarm, constant altimeter/compass calibrations, etc. but no point adding it on.
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@altcmd the screen lags are particularly annoying. For checking things like altimeter or barometer, Its shouldn’t be a 7 second task of choppy scrolling through widgets.
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@e6321 said in Is the Vertical as sub-standard as it seems?:
For checking things like altimeter or barometer, Its shouldn’t be a 7 second task of choppy scrolling through widgets.
You will like the next update
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@isazi so then it must not be related to the firmware. and my (or our, who we are experiencing issues) watches are broken and should be replaced. or?
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@Egika
stop teasing, it is so frustrating -
@Mff73 december is coming
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@6294946 - My point was more around that even apple watch whose OHR is sort of considered a gold standard - even they have issues, and even their watch OHR doesn’t work for everyone. There isn’t one OHR sensor that works well for everyone - its just a fact of life.
Per your statement - you really can’t consider apple like to like with fitness watches as the base market and requirements are completely different.
Assume there are 2m apple watch users its very liikely that 95% of that 2m wouldn’t even know if there HR sensor is working correctly for them or not (and more importantly don’t really care - they just care about closing their rings - so no no real care about HR and or tracking accuracy; its really the say 5% (plucking it out the air but could be right based on the apple watch users I know) that would be interested in OHR accuracy due to health and sport tracking and thus are more likely to complain.
The difference is that 95%-99% of fitness watch users are interested in how good their OHR is (1% is guys like ex pebble users who use garmin to get as close to their pebble exeperience as the can and other weird people who buy fitness watches for notification and long battery life). My point is you can’t compare apple base with fitness watch base. So its very likely that with the fitness watches you would have a much higher percentage of complaints than comparing total apple watch base - the trick is trying to compare to the apple watch base that actually cares about OHR. -
@Mff73 yeah. Been hearing that for a while already.
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@Likarnik December 2024?
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@Egika Any sense of when the next update will be dropped?
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@altcmd said in Is the Vertical as sub-standard as it seems?:
@Brad_Olwin and @stromdiddily
Guides: perhaps a personal preference but the TP guide target numbers do not show a range but the average point. And if doing a HR interval that is a narrow cross between zones, it is sometimes hard to discern the range one wants to keep. Of course I can remember then but that defeats the purpose of a Suunto guide let alone the watch. Out of range beeps or vibration is also missing.If you set the TP guide as a range a range will show in the watch. I typically set mine for a zone and I get this. There is clearly a target range shown at the top of the screen and a target number shown below the screen., I clearly don’t understand your issue.
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@altcmd said in Is the Vertical as sub-standard as it seems?:
Alarm, constant altimeter/compass calibrations, etc. but no point adding it on.
What is the alarm issue? If you want additional alarms there are changes coming…
I never calibrate my altimeter and I travel, I do not have issues with it. Will it be off if I do not calibrate? Yes! but not by much and as soon as I do an exercise it is calibrated by fusedAlti. Weather, I.e. pressure changes will affect the altimeter and this happens in every watch. I don’t calibrate.
Compass calibration is needed if the watch encounters a strong magnetic field. That includes the charger, magnets that hold the pockets on my pack, strong magnets that may hold gloves or other items together. Why is this a problem, it is physics and not much to do about it. Since my SV is charged only once every 2-3 weeks that is about as often as I have to calibrate the compass. Other than magnetic interference I do not have to calibrate the compass. I use routes and often do route finding.
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@Brad_Olwin said in Is the Vertical as sub-standard as it seems?:
Compass calibration is needed if the watch encounters a strong magnetic field. That includes the charger, magnets that hold the pockets on my pack, strong magnets that may hold gloves or other items together. Why is this a problem, it is physics and not much to do about it. Since my SV is charged only once every 2-3 weeks that is about as often as I have to calibrate the compass. Other than magnetic interference I do not have to calibrate the compass. I use routes and often do route finding.
true, but with SV, at least mine (but readind the forum, i am not alone), I have never been asked so often with any Suunto watch to calibrate this compass.
It is a strange calibration : so short “8” movements do the trick that we can ever doubt it is really doing a calibration. And so often prompted that it is strange that so many magnetic influences could be there.
It may again be something that just few of users encountered, and in this case, it is a bug that needs to be adressed, because it might reveals something more “hardware” than just “software”.
Question : is there any open investigation topic at Suunto for SV “compass calibration” ?
PS : while writting, i am entering map screen on my SV, just to see : and i am just prompted to calibrate. And i am just waking up.
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@Mff73 I used to have to calibrate my coros vertix 2 every time I used the compass. I just thought it was regular.