07-06-2014
14:12
- last edited on
07-03-2020
13:14
by
LizzyFitbit
07-06-2014
14:12
- last edited on
07-03-2020
13:14
by
LizzyFitbit
I don't understand what the pace is measuring? Feet adn inches? If so, per what? Thanks for any replies!
Moderator Edit: Clarified subject
Answered! Go to the Best Answer.
08-09-2019 16:03
08-09-2019 16:03
I must confess my ignorance; I don't know what "on the bend" means. I suspect it means "on a curve" but I don't know what curve you are referring to. Email is tough to decipher sometimes, because I am not seeing what you are seeing.
Back to your original question:
" On the bend when I chose waking activity, every kilometer i see a number, and i don’t understand what it means"
I assume you mean 'walking activity'?
So where are you going to find this place to choose the walking activity?
how big is the number that you see? say 100 to 150? If so, that's most likely heart rate I think.
08-09-2019 16:07
08-09-2019 16:07
08-09-2019 16:22
08-09-2019 16:22
are you using an Ionic? Is this number 4.71 at the beginning or during the middle of your walk? perhaps the end of your walk?
when I choose Walk, I see Distance, pace and Elapsed time.
08-09-2019 16:28
08-09-2019 16:28
08-09-2019 16:28
08-09-2019 16:28
before choosing activity (or exercise tracking): I see the today's activity. when I swipe, I see steps, then miles, then flights of stairs, then calories, last the "active mins" (which I take to mean active minutes. That one has a lightning bolt symbol.
I assume you are syncing your Fitbit, then looking at your dashboard?
08-09-2019 16:33
08-09-2019 16:33
08-09-2019 16:44
08-09-2019 16:44
During your activity you see that number, 4.71. Can it be the distance you cover?
08-10-2019 01:35
08-10-2019 01:35
08-10-2019 04:49
08-10-2019 04:49
Sometimes the manual is useful, sometimes it isn't. I couldn't find the meaning of some of the symbols tracking various activities such as the one with a "lightning bolt," so I synced my Ionic and went my dashboard, which told me the "lightning bolt" meant "active minutes" for that day.
I admit I am stumped. If that "4.71" number doesn't show up in your dashboard, I don't know what it is.
08-10-2019 07:29
08-10-2019 07:29
08-18-2019 17:36
08-18-2019 17:36
Hello everyone! I'm glad to see you here participating in the Community. I'm sorry for my delayed response.
@prost22 and @Davdey, thanks for sharing your insights and helping our users.
@GinaRaeSmullen, may I know if the information provided above work for you? If not, please share more details about your inquiry so we can continue helping you.
@Shirkal11, thanks for the details provided and let me clarify that the 1 and 2 will represent your runs, while the 4.71 the time you took to complete that run. For example, it took 4.71 minutes to complete the first run, while you took 5.21 minutes to complete the second run. If you have another question, don't hesitate to let me know.
Keep me posted!
08-26-2019 02:19
08-26-2019 02:19
Once yo u start thinking in "pace," you can stop thinking in mph or kph. Think of runners who compute a four-minute mile or a 9.5 second hundred yards. They never fddle with mph.
If you do a pace of 19.5, try next to run a mile in 19.0.
09-11-2019 17:05
09-11-2019 17:05
You don't have to....fitbit tells you🤔
09-13-2019 19:48
09-13-2019 19:48
Thanks for the info
11-04-2019 17:10
11-04-2019 17:10
Oh man THANK YOU
I thought this was saying "feet and inches per minute" and when I saw a distinctly lower number after trying much more consciously to go faster and keep it up, compared to other activities of the same nature.. I was shocked
Glad to know that my effort was real 😂
04-11-2020 22:27
04-11-2020 22:27
It would be so easy for the coder to allow one to convert pace to the units desired units, which most Fitbit users (Fitbit clients if you will) find alien and could give a hoot about using or manually converting to more conventional expressions of rate of travel. As in Kilometers/hour or (gasp!) miles/hour.
Come on Fitbit, quit being childish. Allow your customers to choose the standard units the prefer using. For most of us it is NOT pace.
05-20-2020 15:33
05-20-2020 15:33
Oh! I was thinking feet & inches too!
05-23-2020 06:26
05-23-2020 06:26
81? I think if you back far enough someone asked what the number " 81' "
meant, that's what the person saw on her/his Fitbit, 81' . I was just that
as an example.
it's a pace, the inverse of speed.---the person's Fitbit said " 81' "
that means she/he took 81 minutes to go one mile. This is obviously
the inverse of speed. I will give you a conversion.
Say your Fitbit says your pace is " 21'30" "...This means you averaged
21 minutes and 30 seconds to go 1 mile.
so let's convert that to miles per hour (MPH)
MPH=(3600)/(60*21+30) So I've multiplied the number of minutes (21) by 60 seconds to
get number of seconds in 21 minutes, then add the 30 additional seconds in your pace,
and I've made that sum (60*21+30) the denominator, and 3600 the numerator (3600 is the
number of seconds in an hour). The result is "Miles per hour."
It will be exactly the same equation if your Fitbit is set up to tell your "kph---kilometres
per hour".
in algebra. Your pace is A'B"
then MPH is
MPH=3600/(A*60+B)
05-23-2020 06:29
05-23-2020 06:29
No, it's minutes and seconds.
example: 10 minutes, 32 seconds would be displayed as
10'32"
06-24-2020 09:42
06-24-2020 09:42
FYI. It confused me as well to start with, then I found this thread 👍
I to was brought up with imperial measurements, so I also immediately assumed feet and inches.
The use as minutes and seconds, although another imperial use of ' & " isn't related to time or distance. These are used for longitude and latitude measurements and should always follow degrees° minutes' and seconds"
Whatever happened to mph? 🙃