Choosing a watch for running

Author
Discussion

pubrunner

Original Poster:

432 posts

83 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
Hi All,

I’m looking for a device to use for running (only) and what I would like, is a watch which offers (as minimum) the following features :

1 GPS – to measure how far I’ve run.

2 Wrist-based heart rate monitoring, with the ability to let me know when I’m training above/below a specific heart rate zone.

3 Although I wear contact lenses and my distance vision is fine, I wear glasses for close-up reading. I’ve found that digital watches I’ve worn previously, have displays that I struggle to read whilst running. Therefore, I’m looking for a watch which displays info with large easy-to-read characters.

I’ve identified a couple of watches that appear to meet my requirements, these being the Garmin Forerunner 35 and the TomTom Runner 3 Cardio.

Can anyone offer any guidance based on first-hand experience of either of these watches . . . or should I be considering something else ?

boyse7en

6,721 posts

165 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
Short answer: Get a Garmin

Longer answer: I'm a member of a running club, and everyone I know who runs with a watch (and that's most of them) uses a Garmin. Everyone I know who has bought an alternative (TomTom, Apple Watch, etc) has eventually bought a Garmin. That are very good at what they do.

Pieman68

4,264 posts

234 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
I've got a TomTom. I'm currently looking at getting a Garmin

The TomTom does what I need it to do, but it takes an age syncing up to the GPS. I also find it quite uncomfortable to wear

Harpoon

1,867 posts

214 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
If you've not found it already, DC Rainmaker does excellent reviews of sports tech'

https://www.dcrainmaker.com/2016/09/hands-on-garmi...

anonymous-user

54 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
I have a tomtom3 - it's brilliant vfm. Accurate GPS, quick to connect to satellites 99.9% of the time and the bread crumb mapping is very good. Battery life still great after 21 months.

I wouldn't buy one today though as TomTom have pulled out of the wearables market - so at some point I won't be able to upload my data.

BigJonMcQuimm

975 posts

212 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
I use a Suunto (Ambit 3) - great for everything from gym exercise to skydiving / BASE.

GPS, altimeter, fully customizable for any sport you can think of.

The jiffle king

6,913 posts

258 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
Garmin 920XT - Does running, cycling and swimming but the run part is great. Gets GPS quickly, can do interval sessions and battery lasts a long time...

C0ffin D0dger

3,440 posts

145 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
Another Garmin vote, got a Forerunner 235 personally, perfect for what I need it for and should meet all your criteria. The display is pretty good though my eyesight is okay. Might be best to have a look at one somewhere before committing. Got mine from Amazon in the Prime Day sale.

SteveO...

465 posts

225 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
Another vote for Garmin. There should be something in the Forerunner range that fits your requirements.

I would avoid the Fenix range as they're more expensive and, in my experience with a Fenix 3, are less sensitive and accurate on GPS.

telford_mike

1,219 posts

185 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
I use a Garmin 235 - easy to read, quick GPS acquisition and syncs automatically. Great bit of kit.

S100HP

12,678 posts

167 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
Another vote for the garmin range. I've a fenix 5 which is great, I'd buy another tomorrow if mine died.

FunkyNige

8,883 posts

275 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
Pieman68 said:
I've got a TomTom. I'm currently looking at getting a Garmin

The TomTom does what I need it to do, but it takes an age syncing up to the GPS. I also find it quite uncomfortable to wear
I had a TomTom, now have a Garmin. The TomTom is great value for money, but it has so many annoying quirks that I got fed up with it.

CooperS

4,503 posts

219 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
FunkyNige said:
Pieman68 said:
I've got a TomTom. I'm currently looking at getting a Garmin

The TomTom does what I need it to do, but it takes an age syncing up to the GPS. I also find it quite uncomfortable to wear
I had a TomTom, now have a Garmin. The TomTom is great value for money, but it has so many annoying quirks that I got fed up with it.
I had one of the original tomtom spark 2 with music. Great vfm as others said but challenging to use and the battery has dwindled to a point I can't rely on it for 2 hour plus rides which in the beginning it was fine (I even did the 3 peaks and it just about coped)

I'd get a Garmin although their software is for me even more challenging but least it works 99% of the time (I've got a golf S5 Garmin watch).

MOBB

3,609 posts

127 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
I went for a garmin 235 as the gps locks in v quickly

No complaints


Blown2CV

28,808 posts

203 months

Monday 15th October 2018
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the new apple watch can tell when you fell over. How clumsy are you?

tenohfive

6,276 posts

182 months

Monday 15th October 2018
quotequote all
I've had two TomTom's and budget wise they were great. But features wise less so. In any case, TomTom are leaving the sports watch market - so you're going to end up with an unsupported product. So I wouldn't buy another.

It's worth having a look at DC Rainmaker's site, he is basically the expert. Although since he went full time with his site it seems to me like he's going into less and less detail...but then, with the amount of stuff he has to wade through it's understandable.

Back to the OP. Normally I'd say, 'buy the best Garmin you can afford,' and that's still a safe bet. Garmin consistently have the strongest feature set, and when they work they are absolutely fantastic bits of kit. I simply wouldn't be without mine. And the FR35 is a very good place to start. But Suunto - after a rocky few years and some reliability issues - seem to have worked out the kinks and have released some decent watches in the mid range, so if you're looking at closer to £200+ then it's worth checking them out. I still think Garmin have the edge overall though, not least because Connect IQ apps have taken off. It feels totally natural to be able to plot in which aid stations have water and which have food in them, or just turn my bedroom light off via my watch now. And that's thanks to Garmin getting third parties on board in a way that no-one else has managed.

mikees

2,747 posts

172 months

Monday 15th October 2018
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Fenix every time. Running trail swimming cycle - fenix

matjk

1,102 posts

140 months

Tuesday 16th October 2018
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I went Apple Watch , obviously you need to be an Apple user (iPhone) and have zero regrets , the gen2 watch has gps and HR built in , I like that it has Strava built in and you don’t need to upload anything , I also like I can download podcast on the actual watch and connect up to Bluetooth headphones , it has a decent speaker that can give verbal comands and you can download all manor of running apps to it , it even automatically twigs when you start exercising like indoor or outdoor running on Nordic training ( it knows what you doing).
I just upgraded to the series 3 with cellular, not had to use it in anger (thank god) but it is nice to know if I get into trouble I can call from my watch and get a taxi , mrs to collect me, police etc . I paid £250 for it as people are all upgrading to gen4 so a used bargain

Jakarta

566 posts

142 months

Tuesday 16th October 2018
quotequote all
I've had over the years and as they've progressed the following:

Garmin 405 - Had a touch bezel, was awful in the rain or if sweaty.
Suunto Ambit 1 - One of the first GPS watches with ABC (Altimeter, Barometer, Compass) but no breadcrumb trail. I traded up for a few reasons, main one was I wanted a breadcrumb trail. Also the strap would only last a year and you couldn't fit a plain strap due to th GPS sensor being in the way.
Suunto Traverse - Had a breadcrumb trail, but came out before HR monitors were the norm. I would have stayed with this longer term but it was stolen from by luggage.
Garmin Fenix 3 HR Sapphire - What I have now, fantastic bit of kit, HR is good, GPS is good (it matches my handheld Garmin unit fairly closely), you can download multiple screens and sports so text size will never be an issue for you. Has smart connectivity so you can see calls and read messages as they come in and decide whether it's worth getting your phone out of your bag to respond. The Fenix 5 came out a couple of weeks after I bought mine, I don't actually think there is any difference although I haven't looked too closely.

Next purchase is likely to be a Garmin dive watch, a friend has just picked up the MK1, it has all the Fenix 5 functionality with it also being a dive computer. Having watched a Suunto D9Tx kill it's battery in 2 years and the ball-ache that comes with getting it changed I am keen to have a do-it-all watch for diving and running that is rechargeable.

The latest Suunto and Garmin batteries (Ambit, Traverse, Spartan, Fenix) seem absolutely fine, You get a warning at 20% on the Garmin, it takes a few hours to fully charge. Under normal use with a couple of decent runs it will last for over a week. You would need to ensure it is fully charged before an Ultra though. Without any runs, it uses about 10% a day. However, if you have a very active home screen with lots of colour it will chew through the battery quickly, I have grey dials on a black background hence the extended duration.



ian in lancs

3,772 posts

198 months

Tuesday 16th October 2018
quotequote all
pubrunner said:
Hi All,

I’m looking for a device to use for running (only) and what I would like, is a watch which offers (as minimum) the following features :

1 GPS – to measure how far I’ve run.

2 Wrist-based heart rate monitoring, with the ability to let me know when I’m training above/below a specific heart rate zone.

3 Although I wear contact lenses and my distance vision is fine, I wear glasses for close-up reading. I’ve found that digital watches I’ve worn previously, have displays that I struggle to read whilst running. Therefore, I’m looking for a watch which displays info with large easy-to-read characters.

I’ve identified a couple of watches that appear to meet my requirements, these being the Garmin Forerunner 35 and the TomTom Runner 3 Cardio.

Can anyone offer any guidance based on first-hand experience of either of these watches . . . or should I be considering something else ?
me too! Plus I want it to sync to Strava. For the last six months, I have been using Decathlon's OnMove 500 which does all for c£70 but I want to treat myself smile