Using Forerunner 255 (former user of Forerunner 235 for 7 years), noticied that after about 50 minutes running and reaching 160bpm, it suddenly went to around 100 bpm.
Is it related to sensor? Outside temperature was about 18-20 degrees.
Using Forerunner 255 (former user of Forerunner 235 for 7 years), noticied that after about 50 minutes running and reaching 160bpm, it suddenly went to around 100 bpm.
Is it related to sensor? Outside temperature was about 18-20 degrees.
Sometimes I think Garmin employees are writing here pretending to be users. No, it's not normal for your heart rate to suddenly drop by 60 bpm after 50 minutes of running. Please stop framing this as normal…
I have the same feeling. They keep introducing new functions, but they can't handle basic readings. Therefore, new functions based on these readings are also wrong. Heart rate spikes, I reset the watch…
It is not so strange that it acts like that. The sensor picks up a noisy signal. The algorithms in the watch will continuously try to determine which of the many frequencies that is your heart rate. Some…
Yeah, also there is no excuse for the newer ones being worse than older models.... Like my Vivoactive 6 locks to certain heart rate ranges (60, 90, 120, 150) then jumps suddenly. My old Vivoactive 4, while it certainly had delays, didn't do this. And it had an older sensor. Embarrassing.
My new Vivoactive 6 is sh**t as well. The 4 was laggy, but it didn't have the issue with locking to certain ranges then jump suddenly.
Yes, I experience the same with the Vivoactive 6. Despite it was laggy a bit, my Vivoactive 4 didn't do this (using an older sensor)...