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- Suitable for use with Garmin watches
- Attractive, simple to use, waterproof, long battery life, and precise counting
- It's time for Polar to update their outdated program to one with more convenient functions and a modern look.
- Accuracy as well as consistency. Construction that is of high quality. It functions accurately even when the belt is not wet. The capacity to record even an extremely lengthy workout on the device's onboard memory.
- Because there is no signal that the battery is running low (when I arrived for the training session, I was unable to start it), you are need to always bring a backup battery with you. If you do not turn on gps when you begin using the Polar Flow software, there will be no indication of your heart rate, and nothing will be recorded. In addition, the software will not allow you to save any data.
- It seems to monitor the pulse as well as the variability fairly correctly.
- It causes irritation on the skin that itches and looks creepy, and after a few nights of wearing it at night, it leaves red marks on the skin. After a while, the irritation goes away, but the marks remain. This does not occur along the entirety of the surface of the sensors; rather, it is limited to the sliver of sensor that is immediately adjacent to the left and right edges (it turns out under the breast).
- Precision when compared to the wrist and sportsmaster bibs. Without a watch, you can record your heart rate by using a phone and a track recording app.
- Maybe someone wrote here that you need to unfasten it from the strap in order to use it, but that would mean that the strap would not last very long due to the tight rivets. The batteries are sufficient for a few months of use for 3-5 workouts per week. It might slide underneath clothing in the winter and land on the belt (rarely). Your heart beats as you tighten it even more. The pulse appears to skip, jitter, and stick to the body. The application is not particularly informative without a clock. Expensive, such a device ought to be more cost-effective.
- Extremely precise pulse counting. Not a bad piece of software, but not without serious flaws (more on them below). There are numerous sports, Les Miles workout presets are crammed in for anyone who wants them, and there is a fitness test that determines your degree of cardiac fitness and splits it into six levels so that you may compare it to others. Polar Flow, which offers a practical training schedule and training journal. With a notebook or Word, you could typically complete all of this by yourself, but here, everything is done at once and automatically. The strap does not chafe and is cozy.
- Now, let's start with a brief battery charge. just 400 hours. Although it is simple to change, the Polar business shop advises doing so only for 600, which is absurd considering how easy it is to do even though not all of them, according to reviews, function properly. Since the cost of replacing the strap is approximately half, this is not very good. There are primarily two issues. Doesn't function nicely with outside apps. It connects every other time and uses an obscure technique, yet its own algorithm is flawless. Although third-party programs, if you somehow managed to connect, work without GPS, the native program cannot function without it. So why would I need GPS, for instance, in the gym? Unclear. Yet, the battery eats naturally. Second, it's unclear what factors into how poorly this GPS counts. As other programs function flawlessly, it is almost certainly a software bug, and the phone cannot be the cause (many Polar watches have the same joke). Using real 10, you might be able to calculate a distance of 2 to 3 kilometers, or perhaps the complete opposite. Although this has no bearing on how many calories are burnt, it is nonetheless foolish. The path will not change. And I wouldn't say that this is a mistake I just occasionally make. It will display your routes to others under your account, such as your Google account, when synchronized with Polar Flow. Where to turn it off was a mystery to me. does not exhibit any arrhythmia.
- Reliable heart rate sensor, relatively straightforward mounting, interoperability with various devices, incl. Use with a phone is possible.
- It might be a little less expensive given the functionality's relative simplicity. Strap that smells.
- Quality, dependability, design, and usability
- failed to find
- Everything is working properly, the program is straightforward and easy to understand, there is a wide variety of exercises to choose from, the GPS performs exceptionally well, and the heart rate monitor connects to the application on the iPhone in a short amount of time.
- Not yet
- Convenient. Sits well.
- Connection is lost at a distance of 80 centimeters, and although having a distance of 1 meter declared, it is not compatible with treadmills.
- - It is not necessary to have a smart watch, there is an application - paired with old Polar FT1 - belt does not slip - it is possible to record a workout in memory
- - The application is sometimes unstable. If I go out of town, I turn off the power saving on the phone so that the GPS works correctly. There are no questions about the heart rate monitor itself. - Polar apps are functional but aesthetically come out of 2022.
- No
- Stupid buggy device
- Compatible with dozens of applications
- Requires an outlet
- Connect via Bluetooth
- I don't remember but there was something
- Real-time heart rate monitoring while exercising
- So far so good