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"Antiglycolytic" training

I don't see an arm band from Garmin. What's a good one?

Pretty much any armband sensor will work, they all connect via bluetooth and a standard called ANT+. Right now the leading armband sensor is the Polar Verity Sense:


But before getting another sensor, I would see if you can't just wear your watch higher up on your forearm so it doesn't interfere with your strength training. I would also make sure you don't like the chest strap - that's the standard form factor because it's the most accurate.

Some more history. Garmin (and Magellan) used to be the "GPS guys." They made handheld and car mounted GPS units. Polar was the "HR watch guys." They made watches that could pair with a giant rubber band chest strap with two metal diodes that had to remain in contact with your skin. You had to smear contact gel on the diodes and on your chest before putting on the strap and then feel like Robocop as you looked at your watch to see HR being displayed while you ran. And that was it, no HR history, metrics, speed or anything else.

But when GPS watches became a thing, Garmin added HR tracking to their GPS tech and Polar added GPS tracking to their HR tech. At least initially, Garmin's HR tech was inferior to Polar and Polar's GPS tech was inferior to Garmin. But they've pretty much evened out and now they're both good at both.

These days, chest straps are WAY more comfortable than the old ones. It's really not a big deal unless you're constantly banging shit against your chest during your workout. I like the armband sensor better but that's just personal preference.

But FWIW I'm with @maximus__ that tracking HR during strength workouts is just a curiosity and kind of a PITA. The only reason to do that is if you REALLY want that data incorporated into your cardio algorithm for VO2 max and recovery status.

If you want to research sensors and HR tech, look at DC Rainmaker. Dude is a hobbyist runner and biker who started a blog and is now the Ryan's Toy Review of HR watches and sensors. On his site he has in-depth comparisons of pretty much everything on the market:

 
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I absolutely need to buy a treadmill. Did a couple reps of 1 min at 6mph and my heart rate shot to 168. The hamster wheel is the only way I'll be able to hold myself accountable as far as speed goes.
Did a 5K on the curve mill and calves were on fire for an hour after. They were trying to cramp up in the pool everytime they straightened out. Road work was the answer on a pretty Saturday evening.
 
First twinge of shin splints running 200m repeats at 8mph. Time to scale back. Also still sick
 
Garmin registered my 2 block walk to my kids school but not the 1.5 miles jogging, 150 back extensions and 150 sit ups I did prior <34>
 
Did a hilly 7 mile hike yesterday and my vo2 max dropped a point. I'll never understand this thing.
 
Ok the Garmin kinda sucks ass for everything and I missed the return window by a day so I'm stuck with it. Doesn't track 200m repeats, 5 mile hikes, or anything accurately for the most part. I've even seen the watch say my heart rate was 160 and when I check the app my high was 148.
 
Ok the Garmin kinda sucks ass for everything and I missed the return window by a day so I'm stuck with it. Doesn't track 200m repeats, 5 mile hikes, or anything accurately for the most part. I've even seen the watch say my heart rate was 160 and when I check the app my high was 148.

Are you still running regularly? Having that much error in your HR reading is surprising and makes me think the sensor is either losing contact with your wrist during workouts or just isn't getting a good reading where it is. If you're "stuck with it," you might as well get some use out of it. Have you tried it with a separate sensor - either a separate armband worn on upper forearm or a chest strap?
 
Are you still running regularly? Having that much error in your HR reading is surprising and makes me think the sensor is either losing contact with your wrist during workouts or just isn't getting a good reading where it is. If you're "stuck with it," you might as well get some use out of it. Have you tried it with a separate sensor - either a separate armband worn on upper forearm or a chest strap?
Do they sell arm bands that link with it? Idk what's wrong with it.
 
Ok the Garmin kinda sucks ass for everything and I missed the return window by a day so I'm stuck with it. Doesn't track 200m repeats, 5 mile hikes, or anything accurately for the most part. I've even seen the watch say my heart rate was 160 and when I check the app my high was 148.
I have never had any issues? Are you using this thing like a fit bit to auto track or actually inputting 200m repeats as a workout?
If you set it to record a 5 mile hike it will record that. If you just walk 5 miles it may assume it's just regular daily movement.
I use mine for track work all the time. It even has a specific workout setting for it.

No clue why you are having issues. Sounds like a faulty product or a user error.
I create workouts in the app and upload them to my watch all the time. I have been able to do this HR based, pace based and even distance based. It's been near flawless the whole time.
 
I have never had any issues? Are you using this thing like a fit bit to auto track or actually inputting 200m repeats as a workout?
If you set it to record a 5 mile hike it will record that. If you just walk 5 miles it may assume it's just regular daily movement.
I use mine for track work all the time. It even has a specific workout setting for it.

No clue why you are having issues. Sounds like a faulty product or a user error.
I create workouts in the app and upload them to my watch all the time. I have been able to do this HR based, pace based and even distance based. It's been near flawless the whole time.
I'm auto tracking. Figured it could tell with elevation changes and hours of constant moving that it was an activity, or if I'm moving at 10-12mph that im working out. Maybe I needed to spring for the solar one.
 
I'm auto tracking. Figured it could tell with elevation changes and hours of constant moving that it was an activity, or if I'm moving at 10-12mph that im working out. Maybe I needed to spring for the solar one.
Go into the Garmin app and set up your workouts for whatever you want to do. Then add them to the calendar and sync your watch. Alternatively go into the activity menu and use the preset "track" or "hike" option.
For 200m repeats you can set rounds, rest and etc. No watch I know of on the market could accurately work out things like that just by being worn.

It will activate the optical censor for the duration of the workout as opposed to reading it say every minute, depending on your settings.

Add those workouts to your calendar through Garmin, sync it and then it will come up with "Do workout" when you open the workout menu.
 
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