08-01-2016 01:51
08-01-2016 01:51
Hi,
So I switched to the Blaze from a Charge HR, which I really loved, because I wanted something that looked more watch-like with some more smart-watch type features.
I love it but I've noticed the HRM sometimes decides to just climb and climb. I like to do long warm-ups before I exercise and some of that involved jogging on the spot etc (I must confess I occasionally do this to bring my steps up as well).
Sometimes when doing this in particular my heart rate on the watch shows as climbing rapidly and then sitting around 145 and occasionally 155 when clearly it's only actually around 75/80.
I suspect the answer is simply to take it off when jogging on the spot and not using that to raise my steps... but it is a convenient way of doing so when I have a really busy day at work and happen to get 20 minutes to myself when I get home or something. IT sometimes reads this as elliptical training which is fine as I can just delete the activity; but the heart rate reading too high issue bothers me as it suggests my daily heart rate readings and calorie burn might be way, way off and I'm just not noticing it.
Sometimes I can make it not do that by sitting for 20 seconds and letting it get back to a realistic heart rate and then starting again and trying to hold my hand still but sometimes not.
Any thoughts? Anyone had the same problem?
I've tried different arm positions
08-01-2016 12:39
08-01-2016 12:39
@Wilkovian Welcome to the Fitbit Community! So when you had the Charge HR, would it only show your heartrate at 75 when you were warming up? I am just wondering how you know it should be so much lower?
08-02-2016 04:14
08-02-2016 04:14
@Jrdubyakc A combination of what my Charge showed which was around 70/75 and I also use a Polar chest heart rate monitor. The Charge showed always within 2 or 3 beats what the Polar showed; as does the Blaze most of the time except for these situations
08-02-2016 07:00
08-02-2016 07:00
Aria, Fitbit MobileTrack on iOS. Previous: Flex, Force, Surge, Blaze
08-03-2016 00:51
08-03-2016 00:51
@bbarrera Yes I think it definitely is but I'm not sure how to solve it; I know you're not supposed to tighten it too much but I've tried it very tight, middling tight and snug without constricting as well as slightly loose and at different spots on the arm and all seem to exhibit it sometimes.
08-19-2016 04:36
08-19-2016 04:36
It's great to see you around @Wilkovian, @bbarrera and @Jrdubyakc thanks for stopping by and the troubleshoot provided. The heart rate reading varies depending on several factors like movement, temperature, humidity, stress level, physical body position, caffeine intake, and medication.
If you haven't already done so, please review our information and tips for heart rate accuracy at http://fitbit.link/qrewt. If your heart rate monitor seems broken or inaccurate after taking the recommendations into account, I recommend getting in touch with our support team, since they have the proper tools to see the information that your tracker is registering.
Let me know the outcome.
09-21-2016 03:05 - edited 09-21-2016 03:06
09-21-2016 03:05 - edited 09-21-2016 03:06
I have bought 2 fitbits since April. I started with a Charge HR . When I .saw that I really would use it dailty I purchased a Blaze. My resting HR has been between 69 and 72. Rarely the same two days in a row. Now I am seeing 6 days at 74, and then today 75. This causes the HR to register 104 or something rediculous when I stand up and walk across the room. When I contacted Fitbit I was emailed that I have the wrong email address (it hasn't changed), I suppose this is a way to not deal with the issue.
09-21-2016 04:18
09-21-2016 04:18
I have these problems too. The heart rate is climbing rapidly, then it falls down. But I already had this behaviour with my Charge HR. High HR, then "--" and after that a normal HR.
09-21-2016 07:58
09-21-2016 07:58
Hi,
11-17-2016 00:42 - edited 02-06-2017 00:52
11-17-2016 00:42 - edited 02-06-2017 00:52
Hi,
Has there been any update on this? It's still having the same issue with the activities I'm afraid. I've tried moving to different spots and have still been comparing it to my Polar chest strap monitor and monitoring it by counting for verification.
Running on the spot still makes it start to climb rapidly unless I hold my hand at my waistband whilst jogging and even then it's 50/50 to see if it starts to climb on its own anyway and then I have to stop and let it sit at which point the heart rate blanks to '--' for about 30 seconds then returns a realistic reading again. I'm assuming it has to do with the movement of my hand? But given that I run with my arms moving slightly (as they are when it over-reads my heart rate jogging on the spot) I'm concerned for the accuracy of other activities too.
As I say, if it's just an artefact of the optical reader as opposed to the more accurate electrical reading from a chest strap then I suppose that's just something we'll have to deal with; it just seems like something the developers might want to know about for future iterations of the devices.
[Edit: Spelling]
11-17-2016 03:10
11-17-2016 03:10
I took mine off and sat it on a table. It said that my heart rate was 85, after resetting. Over two weeks my base rate rose from 68-72 over several months, to 74 for several days, then 75 for several days, next 76??? I did contact fitbit and asked for an update that would address the problem, they said that it was impossible to contact whoever does the updates. It was the same with my charge hr which is why I bought the blaze. I am glad to hear about the difference with your chest belt, at least I know that I'm not alone in this. Have a great day.
02-04-2017 12:50
02-04-2017 12:50
Is there any way to prevent it from guessing heart rate based on stride? Its pretty annoying to have it log 180+ bpm when the actual heart rate is closer to 110. I would rather have no data than bad data.
02-06-2017 01:20
02-06-2017 01:20
@bfox i don't understand what your asking. The Blaze uses two lights and looks at the volume changes of the blood in the capillaries to figure out your pulse.
See the Heartrate FAQ at http://help.fitbit.com/articles/en_US/Help_article/1565
The stride is only used when determining how far uouve walked, based on the strps taken.
02-06-2017 03:33
02-06-2017 03:33
I have noticed to be fair that sometimes when you take it off rather than reading a '- -' for heart rate and assuming base line it does sometimes remain at whatever the heart rate reading was when it was removed.
I don't like to sleep with it on; I'm not bothered about checking my sleep habits particularly and my partner doesn't like it because sometimes if I roll over or something I can catch her with the edges of the bezel so I take it off. When I pop it back in the charger it realizes it's not on my wrist and I get a normal readout. When I don't, it often gives me an overnight calorie burn that is crazy and I have to put it in as driving or something sedate so that it discounts the extra calories burned.
Not sure if that's connected to the heart rate issue or not, but it's another anomaly that I figure is worth reporting!
02-06-2017 09:10
02-06-2017 09:10
I get what your're saying, but just try this:
Clap your hands at a rate of about three beats per second for a couple minutes without actually doing other activity to actually raise heart rate. Then look back at the fitbit data. The fitbit algorithm takes that "activity" and projectects where the heart rate should go. Thought it may work on average, even under real activity that projection is not accurate for many people.
I'll rather get real data, even if its lagged.
02-07-2017 10:59
02-07-2017 10:59
@bfox you are absolutely right, if Blaze can't find HR sometimes it will lock onto your running cadence (or clapping!). Here is some collaboration from well respected triathlete and fitness tech reviewer DCRainmaker:
"This was a slower pace for me, so my HR was much slower (130BPM). However, the Fitbit Blaze was showing nearly 20-30bpm higher, around 160BPM. Why? Well, it made the classic mistake of optical HR straps: It locked onto my running cadence. This often occurs when a heart rate strap can’t find your heart rate"
Source: https://www.dcrainmaker.com/2016/03/fitbit-blaze-depth-review.html
Aria, Fitbit MobileTrack on iOS. Previous: Flex, Force, Surge, Blaze
02-12-2017 04:06
02-12-2017 04:06
Welcome to the Community @bfox, @Wilkovian it's great to see you around, @bbarrera and @Rich_Laue thanks for stopping by.
If you are having problems with your heart rate accuracy, I recommend checking this post, where you will be able to see some things that might be affecting this reading and some tips to improve this feature.
See you later.
07-26-2017 11:52
07-26-2017 11:52
I am 66 and my Fitbit blaze does exactly the same thing, it rises to 160BPM or thereabouts on brisk walking but on checking my pulse manually I find my heart rate is actually 100BPM. As it is important to me to read my target heart rate this watch is all but useless. We all know that stress, caffeine, temperature etc affect your heart rate and I have tried wearing it in various positions on my arm. Sometimes it loses the pulse altogether and then shows very high (160 ish) and on adjusting on my arm sometimes it will show the 90---100BPM that it should be showing. Any ideas would be welcome.
07-27-2017 03:55
07-27-2017 03:55
Hi Alejandra,
Thanks for your reply. I've tried all of those things many times and sadly it's no better. Mostly I think the device is great but that particular feature definitely needs attention I'm afraid. Something to be considered for future models and updates perhaps?
07-27-2017 03:56
07-27-2017 03:56
Hi Alejandra,
Thanks for your reply. I've tried all of those things many times and sadly it's no better. Mostly I think the device is great but that particular feature definitely needs attention I'm afraid. Something to be considered for future models and updates perhaps?