The RHR function no longer adheres to AHA definition of RHR: WAKING lowest heart rate when sitting or laying comfortably. In my case, the data is 20+ points above the actual values. I hope Garmin can fix this, as some of us have had this issue.
Yep, god knows what the calc does these days but the values are pure nonsense now. I have raised it (and there's another thread on it I've created). Disappointing.
+1. Metric is now a farce. Woke up and sat in bed for quite a few minutes with a resting heart rate of 40 but the watch then chooses to record my much higher heart rate during breakfast time and refusing to budge on the value!
GCM is now a random metrics generator, so many threads, dont forget calories and sleep are now random figures also for some......I and others sent all info off to Garmin for analysis, who are doing their best to fix it. +1 for metrics are now usless....
I have the same issue. And the really confusing part is that my resting heart rate is consistently higher than my average resting heart rate for the same day according to Garmin Connect (both the app and the website)... Shouldn't it normally be the opposite? As in, your resting heart-rate is the lowest heart rate of the day, and the average resting (non-active, sedentary) heart rate is higher.
And if I look in the watch's heart rate widget, and check my average RHR for the last 7 days there, this is again a completely different value than what is shown in Garmin Connect.