Does the forerunner 235 have recovery check?What specifically do you mean? The FR235 will neither prevent nor warn you if you want to start another tracked activity before the recovery advisor has counted down to zero hours, if that's the gist of your question.
… & recovery check during the first minutes of the exercise.I've never seen my FR235 give me any notification/alert/warning/advice with regard to recovery in the first so many minutes into my run. The Owner's Manual doesn't say anything about it, either. Given it's a statement that apparently applies to the FR230 as well, it's not something tied to the built-in optical heart rate sensor. I don't know, maybe it's something that only happens if I'm wearing a chest strap HR monitor that transmits HRV data and I start an exercise before the Recovery Advisor has counted down to zero?
Does the forerunner 235 have recovery check? I am getting my recovery time at end of a run but nothing at start of run. Thanks
But surely if you take notice of the recovery advisor you would want to know what it said before your run?Not really. Recovery Advisor calculates and suggests a recovery time with no (advance) knowledge of what the user will do and/or experience in the next so many hours, but the body's readiness to handle intense training is affected by almost countless variables – the amount and quality of sleep, mood, general wellness or illness, food and fluid intake, consumption of alcohol or other stimulants, etc. within the period between exercise sessions. If anything, the user would want to know how fit and ready he/she is before (or at the start of) a training session, not how fit and ready some entity ‘thought’ he/she would be some 24-48 hours (or longer) in advance. Firstbeat's recovery checking uses HRV readings taken at the time the user's physiological readiness is assessed, most likely with no regard for what Recovery Advisor reports.
Otherwise you would have prepared for your run, gone outside, started to get some pace up and suddenly Recovery Advisor says "No!" Take another 5 hours rest or whatever.You can always simply decide not to train/exercise as intensely if your body is having a bad/off day.
Not really. Recovery Advisor calculates and suggests a recovery time with no (advance) knowledge of what the user will do and/or experience in the next so many hours, but the body's readiness to handle intense training is affected by almost countless variables – the amount and quality of sleep, mood, general wellness or illness, food and fluid intake, consumption of alcohol or other stimulants, etc. within the period between exercise sessions. If anything, the user would want to know how fit and ready he/she is before (or at the start of) a training session, not how fit and ready some entity ‘thought’ he/she would be some 24-48 hours (or longer) in advance. Firstbeat's recovery checking uses HRV readings taken at the time the user's physiological readiness is assessed, most likely with no regard for what Recovery Advisor reports.
You can always simply decide not to train/exercise as intensely if your body is having a bad/off day.