Watches for climbing?
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Desert Rock Sports wrote: Thanks for the information, that is interesting. I spent the weekend with a friend and his new garmin 6. The two watches (coros vertix 1) seemed roughly equivalent. Actually they looked strikingly similar physically. I suspect all the manufactures use pretty much the same hardware with software being the biggest difference. Like you said, the garmin maps were better, both of us had noticed problems with heart rate and the garmin watch faces seemed prettier although both suffer from the problem that the hands on the 'analog' watches cover the data when they overlap (they could easily draw the layers in another order so the hands are on the bottom and the data always visible). We were both disappointed that there were not a few dress up watch faces that looked really good for a night on the town. The coros battery life was is much better but I suspect that will become more equal in the next generation of watches. His watch did not have the O2 sensor so we could not compare that feature. About the heart rate issues. I think that many people think the reported heart rates are good but people who have a lot of time training can easily tell when the heart rate is messed up. On one hike my heart read 30 beats/minute higher than it was for at least 10 minutes; that is useless for training. Often my watch reports 1.5x and 2x my actual heart rate. I got a polar h10 heart rate strap almost immediately after I used the watch for a few times because it was obvious the heart rate information was poor. I am pretty sure I would have been a little less disappointed with a garmin but still not happy with it. I am value driven, what do it get for the money spent and my friend got his garmin for 60% off so I would have been much happier at that price point. I doubt I would be very happy with the high end garmin fenix 7 for $1000+ with the flaws. These watches have a long way to go before they full fill the possibility. Hopefully when this one dies the state of the art will be more in line with my expectations. There are several posts in this thread that say heart rate is unimportant for climbing. In some sense they are right but if your climbing goals include big alpine objectives a lot of your training needs to be endurance training (for hiking and climbing with a pack on) and heart rate monitors are very useful for training for that goal. In my local climbing area the vast majority of the climbing has a over an hour approach, some approaches are 4 hours so endurance is key. If you a sport climbing 10 minutes from the road then endurance training is not very important. |
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climber pat wrote: Just so you know, Coros released the Vertex 2 last year, and thus far I’ve only heard good things about it. Maybe they’ve fixed some of the issues that you’ve had? |
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Jaime Navarro Gutierrez wrote: For GPS tracking for the approach and decent, just about any big name GPS watch out there can do the work. For tracking heart rate, all watches worn on the wrist do NOT provide accurate readings, and it's even worse, much worse, while climbing (due to way too much wrist movement). Eliud Kipchoge, the sub-2-hour marathon record holder is (currently) sponsored by Coros, which is also worn by many elite athelets, but he wears a chest strap HRM, so that tells you something. The most accurate recreational heart rate monitoring can be achieved by wearing an optical HRM on upper arm using a nylon armband (no slippage). The strict criteria leaves me with only two options: Polar OH1 (now Verity Sense) and Apple Watch, which is the only watch for which you can purchase Braided Solo Loop (example) that allows for stretching and no slippage. Silicone bands will not work. Even the chest strap HRM gets interference with any bumps (e.g. by the climbing knot) on the chest and may have too many artifacts in the data. You can see the distinct heart rate pattern measured on upper arm in this post. However, the clear (beautiful in my eyes) HR pattern shown is only seen with gym climbing where you thoroughly relax while belaying, which is the reason for the distinct contrast. When tracked in the outdoor multipitch climbing settings, the heart rate peaks and troughs become less obvious, even though they are accurate. Just too much is going on while hanging on a vertical face. These days. I use my Apple Watch to track all my activities for its impressive GPS tracking and accurate heart rating reading. (I can make these bold statements after countless side-by-side and overlay comparisons with many devices.) It offers a "Climbing" type workout, but I only use it for indoor climbing as it does not invoke GPS. Outside, I leave it on Hiking type all day. When out climbing, with diligent disablement of non-essential features, I was able to stretch the battery to 12+ hours of GPS+HR tracking on my watch. There are many GPS/HR watches out there that can offer much much longer battery life, but I've yet to find one that has compatible nylon/stretchable armband that allows me to wear it on the upper arm. I personally have not seen any integration of InReach (mini 2) with the rest of Garmin ecosystem. Maybe I missed the feature, but it does not appear to be important as InReach is only meant for SOS in my mind. |
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I always felt that having the watch around the pack strap near your upper chest was the best. It is less in the way, and scratches on the rock less than when worn on your harness, and you can see it while climbing without using your hands. |
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I love my Garmin Solar Instinct. It's made for the outdoors. After repeatedly breaking a number of smart fitness tracking watches I got the Instinct and love it. It's pretty indestructible (it has some military grade rating), waterproof, has an insane battery life (> 54 days) and you can charge it with the sun. It has a GPS, altimeter, compass and navigation mode, HR monitor, thermometer, pulse ox (though I haven't been able to really make that work), and speedometer, if you change sports and want to track your speed for running, snowboarding, cycling, etc. It also tells me when I'm ovulating or going to get my period. Also, I've had really great experience with Garmin's customer support--unlike Apple, Garmin support their products forever, even as newer, fancier products come on the market. I will say the watch (or Garmin) is not the best for tracking sport climbs just because it doesn't really have a specific feature for that, but if I use it in the gym, I usually just track my heart rate, calories burned, etc. If you're doing bigger objectives outside, I think it would probably be great for that, since it can map your routes, track distance and altitude and is super durable. The data (especially the maps) are pretty fun to review. The other watches I've tried just break way too easily. |
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Mark Casey wrote: Even-older timers did the same objectives without watches. It’s fine to supplement your skills and abilities with other tools. |
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Mark Casey wrote: Old timers did the same objectives with boots, hemp ropes, pitons, no helmets, and no chalk. Doesn't mean technology is useless just because somebody could do without at one point in time. |
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The sensors on fitness bands and even or especially the Apple Watch are hot garbage, and the wrist is not a good spot for readings. Met with the designer of an actual research grade device once and when we asked him about the sensors in the Apple Watch he burst into laughter. |
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The very first climbers carried barometers and took readings if you want to get all 1800's. I admit a barometer watch is nice to have in the alpine, snigger if you want, sometimes I do wear my Casio on the approach. |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eY2n9tJO_8U |
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My coros died after about 9 months. Instead of continuing the poor experience by dealing with their warranty and getting another piece of junk, I bought a Garmin 945. The difference is night and day. Just about everything works on the Garmin. The training software needs help and suggests workouts that are not very well tuned to the condition of the wearer but are fun to play with. The spo2 sensor is better than the coros but not very good. Everything else seems to work great. The hr monitor works 99% of the time without the need to shave my wrist, the sleep monitor seems reasonable, the maps are really good. I get about 7 days between charges. I'm pleased with the watch. |
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