06-13-2018 11:48 - last edited on 09-10-2019 14:53 by MatthewFitbit
06-13-2018 11:48 - last edited on 09-10-2019 14:53 by MatthewFitbit
Hi everyone! It has come to our attention that some users are experiencing issues with syncing/setting up Aria scales with Comcast/Xfinity routers and we are currently reviewing.
There is a workaround that has helped most users. For this, follow the instructions below:
Thank you all for your patience. Any update available, I'll make sure to share it in this thread.
07-24-2018 13:27
07-24-2018 13:27
My current status: 5 days ago I managed, with help from various posts here, to get my scale reconnected to my Comcast router. This morning, I weighed myself ... and no connection. I didn't have time then, so just now I went through the steps to reconnect again. It took 2 or 3 tries, 15 or 20 minutes, but it did work: my weight synced to Fitbit (several pounds more than what it was at the beginning of the day!).
Here's what I think: any little glitch in the network--not a power outage necessarily, but the router just dropping the network for a few seconds, which happens a lot--will disconnect the scale, and it will not be able to reconnect by itself. I've got a thermostat that can do better. So I expect to have to go through the setup process every time I want to weigh. Do I get up 20 minutes earlier just to do this first thing in the morning?
I think what we have here is dueling incompetences: Fitbit decided to use a legacy WiFi standard, 802.11b; and Comcast can't make a router that reliably provides an 802.11b 2.4GHz network. I'm definitely not going to change ISPs to get a Fitbit scale to work. Maybe just get a new router? But even if that fixes the problem, the first unannounced firmware upgrade is liable to recreate it.
So, maybe time to either manage my fitness without a digital device (I hear rumors that people actually are able to do this), or find better digital equipment. In any case, the value I'm getting from Fitbit continues to shrink.
07-24-2018 17:09
07-24-2018 17:09
Yes. I noticed they are even still on Amazon. We have them as an incentive on a health program. Still at a huge cost. They should, at least, be pulled as recalls. Except, that probably implies replacement. We know that's not happening.
07-24-2018 17:49
07-24-2018 17:49
07-24-2018 19:03
07-24-2018 19:03
07-25-2018 04:32
07-25-2018 04:32
This still does not work as a solution!!!
07-25-2018 13:05
07-25-2018 13:05
Once again this morning some network glitch (I assume) disconnected the scale from my WiFi, so I'm giving up. I'll keep using it a couple times a week, and enter weights in Fitbit manually. I'd rather do that than shell out for a different scale and then be tracking weight in one app and activity in another.
There are threads about this on the Comcast help forums too (e.g., here and here). This is guesswork as much as knowledge on my part, but I think that:
07-25-2018 13:08 - last edited on 07-26-2018 08:04 by JuanJoFitbit
07-25-2018 13:08 - last edited on 07-26-2018 08:04 by JuanJoFitbit
Exactly! How can Fitbit allow vendors to be selling these units knowing they have such a serious problem. Those units are under warranty! If the new buyers waste enough time with earnest attempts with Fitbit and Comcast, their return window will expire!
The unbought Aria units need to be pulled from the selves!
Moderator edit: format
07-25-2018 16:02
07-25-2018 16:02
07-25-2018 21:21
07-25-2018 21:21
This didn't fix the sync issue
07-26-2018 08:06
07-26-2018 08:06
Hello guys! Your feedback and comments are sent to our team since they're actively reviewing this issue and expect to have a solution. Please keep an eye on this thread when an update is posted.
Thank you all for your patience with this!
07-26-2018 08:49 - edited 07-29-2018 09:13
07-26-2018 08:49 - edited 07-29-2018 09:13
"When the screen refreshes, click edit again, select b/g/n and hit save."
Hate to tell you, on the latest Comcast/Xfinity modem/router, there is no option for the 802.11b protocol. It's gone gang!
These modem/routers no longer support the 802.11b protocol. Without this protocol (cheap crap used in the manufacture of this scale), you might as well have purchased a $10 scale at the "Walmart".
(Oh, and Fitbit has been aware of this issue for a long time)
07-26-2018 12:56
07-26-2018 12:56
07-26-2018 13:11
07-26-2018 13:11
I would have a tendency to agree with that. It's one thing to make a mistake and have a problem product, but to knowingly continue to produce and sell that product indicates total moral turpitude.
I personally, will never purchase another Fitbit product.
07-28-2018 08:28
07-28-2018 08:28
@Timberwolf620 @techgirl233 I know that hearing the same instructions is tedious. However, our team are actively reviewing this issue and will post an update when a solution is released.
Thank you for your patience!
07-28-2018 21:00
07-28-2018 21:00
I'd like a refund!
07-29-2018 01:22 - last edited on 07-31-2018 05:22 by JuanJoFitbit
07-29-2018 01:22 - last edited on 07-31-2018 05:22 by JuanJoFitbit
It’s more than tedious. At this point, patronizing, insulting and infuriating. The same instructions? Everyone on this thread is telling you they don’t work.
You know they don't work!
Stop posting the same litany! Do something for the customers that have spent much on products that have been broken form months!
Moderator edit: format
07-29-2018 06:43
07-29-2018 06:43
I don't either. Sooo frustrating...
07-30-2018 05:19
07-30-2018 05:19
07-30-2018 11:14 - edited 07-30-2018 14:24
07-30-2018 11:14 - edited 07-30-2018 14:24
I know. They've been "actively" working on it since at least October of 2017. My scales last wireless link was September 24, 2017. Since that time I've spent literally hours on the phone with tech support going through all of the setup procedures to no avail. This is time I will obviously never get back, totally wasted; all the while (I suspect) Fitbit new exactly what the problem was but continued to waste customer's time. What's the line "Don't call us, we'll call you." just as soon as a solutions been found.
I'm sure the numbers have been crunched and it’s been determined that the least cost approach is to write-off the customers who’s networks no longer support wireless 802.11b rather than face the expense of fixing a physical defect in the Aria scale.
07-30-2018 13:54
07-30-2018 13:54