Live testing Fenix 6 Sapphire vs Fitbit Charge 4 (GPS maps added)

So, i'll be doing a few days worth of live testing with both devices. They are for sure in different leagues, both feature and price wise.
But for the things that they do have in common, how do they fare up against each other?
I'm not a runner, so i'll be focusing on walks, sleep, overall HR and SpO2 readings.

If you have some request for testing, let me know.
I picked up the Charge 4 since it's one of the few which does SpO2 on a regular basis and has built-in GPS. Other stuff out there either doesn't have those (aw3/4/5) or do it on-demand only (huawei gt2/gt2e).

Fenix 6 Sapphire - Official FW 8.1.0
Charge 4 - FW 20001.82.46

WALK activity
===========
the results are pretty damn close. Slight advantage to Fenix6 for faster initial GPS lock and somewhat better tracking. To be fair, i think Fitbit's taking some time to do the first ever GPS lock for a new device (they have a support article on that), but subsequent usage should be faster. Will test more over the next days. Also i noticed the Fitbit GPS track is accurate but is displayed somewhat shifted on the map itself. I've noticed this on garmin connect as well if one chooses openmaps or google maps. Not a dealbreaker. Both better than AW (assisted) GPS tracking which cuts & rounds corners in a frenzy.

Fenix 6:

     

Charge 4:


CONCLUSION:

Time in Hr zones identical
Average HR almost same
Pace faster on Fitbit
Distance more on Fitbit
Total time more on Fitbit
Elevation gain almost the same
Min/Max HR pattern quite similar
More calories reported by Fitbit
Altitude values quite off between the two (Fenix 6 altimeter/barometer were manually calibrated using GPS few hours before)

Fitbit got GPS lock about 20-30 seconds later than the Fenix6 (as i already started the walk), which COULD explain the differences. As i said, i'll test more later on.

SLEEP ANALYSIS
===============

Fenix 6 (INITIAL values)


Fenix 6 (ADJUSTED values) - yes, they do change if you check back the sleep stats 30min later Slight smile



Charge 4


CONCLUSION

Resting HR identical !
Detected sleep overall time better by Fitbit (including initial awake time before actually falling asleep)
Better Fitbit wake up detection (in this case i did toss & turn a lot before actually waking up)
Complete sleep cycles (light-deep-light-rem) can be seen on both devices more or less (esp. 2nd half of the night)
Garmin did not pick up any awake time
SpO2...well, looks kind of similar in the sense that you CAN imagine 4 spikes (towards high) on the Fitbit vs. 4 throughs on the Garmin. They are displaying the values differently though.


OVERALL DAILY HR
=================
Fenix 6:

Charge 4:

CONCLUSION
I'd say quite mirror-like except one spike which looks more exaggerated on the Fitbit. Dunno, hand movement, band placement or something else.
Will be tested also for few days in parallel.

So, what do you think? 
I can't swim right now (duhh) so one comparison i really wanted to do (pool swimming) will have to wait a while :)
Any other comparisons you'd like to see?

  • I would be curious how they stack up in both strength training and on a bike ride (either road or mtb). I find the F6 really struggles to capture high HRs and especially quick increases in HR and quick decreases (during strength training).

    Thanks for doing all of this btw!

  • From my short experience (1 week) the Charge4 is in a different league where 24/7 tracking is concerned. Walks, cycle rides, etc. are displaying an accurate WHR within a few seconds or max. a minute or so. Fenix WHR during 24/7 tracking is a joke, even after six months of firmware upgrades.

  • Last year, I bought both myself and wife a FitBit (Versa).  I started with the charge 3 and wanted something better.  After 6 months, my watch just stopped working.  Sent it back, got another..  3 months later.. same thing.  Meanwhile, my wife who just wears it to the office.. hers also stopped working and had major glitches around that same time.   Funny enough, one of my clients had the same program with the same watch.   Searched online, and saw a TON of posts about the same thing.

    FitBit is a JOKE.

    Then, I went and bought the Garmin FR245.  Had this for 8 months and JUST LOVE the Garmin eco system and the watch.  So much so, that I just bought the 6s and could not be happier.  HR tracking is very accurate and this is a solid piece of hardware that is going to last.

    Anyway, that was my experience.  Right or wrong, the Garmin works much better for me.  (also bought the EDGE 530 and all the sensors for my bike).  Now, looking back.. I could never go back to anything else.  Seriously.  If you really use this stuff and are not just buying for the sake of having a fitness tracker, the Garmin is impossible to beat.

  • ALL DAY 24/7 HR
    ==============

    Fitbit:

    Fenix 6:

  • SLEEP TRACKING 2nd TEST
    ======================
    (i'll put the images side by side instead of per device, for better comparison view)

    Fitbit caught the correct "go to sleep" time
    Both Garmin & Fitbit detected awake time at around 8 AM (got out of bed for couple of minutes, then went back)
    Average HR identical for both
    Fitbit detected correct wake time, Garmin not really


    Stages overview
    =============
      

    Stages breakdown
    ===============

    SpO2 Interpretation
    ===============

      

    Sleep overall HR graph
    ==================
      

    Average sleep HR (59 both!)
    ======================
      

  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 5 years ago in reply to 7187100

    Cant even get my Fenix 6+ to sync with my phone over half the stuff on the watch I cant use.  Done all the usual turn on turn off reset update etc and zerowww.

  • If you really use this stuff and are not just buying for the sake of having a fitness tracker, the Garmin is impossible to beat.

    Right now I have bought the Fitbit for just having a fitness tracker. Comparing a 150 dollar tracker to a 800 dollar watch makes no sense, but I really don’t see why Garmin is impossible to beat? After more than two years of using Garmin watches (FR645 / FR945 / F6pro) this is my first two weeks without Garmin. I have not missed the body battery, stress score, MoveIQ (speaking of a joke!), 24/7 WHR, worthless sleep tracking, inaccurate GPS tracks, etc. for even a second. Next week my new Polar Grit X will arrive and I will ditch my Fenix. Sure Garmin is fine for activity tracking and there are nice features (music, Garmin Pay), but as a whole I am seriously disappointed with Garmin, their ecosystem and their software development.

  • Check calorie count for a day. Fitbit showed me some rocket high calories burned so I went with Garmin and they seem much more realistic.

  • as requested by  here is calories comparison over 2 days.

    Fitbit reports slightly higher values, but i honestly have no idea what's more realistic.

    Day 1

      

    Day 2

      

    Here is a STEP COUNT comparison from today
    ====================================

    What i noticed is that outside a "walk activity", both devices are pretty close. As soon as i have a walk, the values get more on the Fitbit (reflected in the total distance of the workout vs. the Garmin one - which also can influence the calories burnt count above).

    Keep in mind that Charge 4 is on quite new firmware, there's room for improvement here. I'm not quite happy with the GPS track recorded, it seem to wander more than the Garmin one which is ROCK solid most of the time.

      

    What i also did 2 days ago is i switched the devices around. Initially Fenix 6 was on left hand, Charge 4 on right (with dominant setting). Now i have Charge 4 on left (with non-dominant setting) and Fenix 6 on right. I don't have a sensitivity or left/right hand option in Garmin Connect (except the backlight on-gesture, i think)

    EDIT: i found out why Charge 4 steps seem to go off compared to the Fenix 6 during/after a walk workout (which uses GPS):
    https://help.fitbit.com/articles/en_US/Help_article/1141

    When you track an activity with GPS, your device calculates your distance using GPS data rather than steps. If you begin moving before you get a GPS signal, your device calculates distance using your steps until GPS connects. 

  • Three more comparisons: All day HR yesterday, Overall HR today & Sleep last night

    ALL DAY HR COMPARISON (previous day)
    ==================================

      

    OVERALL HR (today)
    =================

      

    SLEEP ANALYSIS (previous night)
    ===========================

    Total duration

      

    Sleep Stages

       

    Pulse OX & Average Sleep HR

         

    Conclusions
    - Average HR identical
    - Stages on Garmin all over the place (light & deep way off)
    - SpO2 looks similar on both