03-11-2016 01:11 - edited 03-11-2016 01:53
03-11-2016 01:11 - edited 03-11-2016 01:53
I went cross country skiing with my Blaze for the first time last night. It has no specific exercise mode for skiing, so I tried running and walking. I connected to the GPS on my iPhone6. The problem was that I want to display heart rate only. But the watch started by itself to circulate between pace, distance etc. So I had to stop, take off my gloves and force it back to heart rate display, just to find that after a few minutes it was back on pace or whatever else I did not want to see.
This is disappointing. It makes the device useless for heartrate monitoring during skiing. You don’t want to stop and take off your gloves each time you want to monitor. It actually never went back to heart rate by itself, by the way.
My questions are:
As it is now, I cannot use the Exercise mode for skiing. The only option to monitor heart rate is the colors on the "Zone" clock face. But then I lose the GPS features and the possibility to check distance while skiing.
BTW, I noticed the "Secondary display" option in the Running mode where I can choose Heart Rate. Unfortunately the digits of the secondary display are too small for me to read without glasses. Using glasses while skiing is not an option.
Any solutions, please?
03-11-2016 04:08
03-11-2016 04:08
Right now here is no way.
08-26-2017 13:08
08-26-2017 13:08
It it also the case that the heart rate monitor cannot be seen in ANY exercise mode?
The elliptical machine reported my max heart rate today was 136 ppm. After I finished, Fitbit Blaze reported it as 153 ppm. How do I know which device is correct?!
That is an alarming difference in a man over 70 years old. Unless there is a way to monitor heart rated during exercise, and I can be certain the Fitbit is accurate with the band adjusted as directed,I will cease to use those functions on this device when I work out. Period. I would rather monitor my heart as the true monitor of my exercise, all bells and whistles to the contrary.