Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Uncategorized
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Uncategorized
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Uncategorized
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Uncategorized
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Uncategorized
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.
Weather
Garmin Forerunner update 18.22 sounds great on paper but is frustrating some runners
(Image credit: Michael Hicks / Android Central) What you need to knowGarmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.Although…
What you need to know
- Garmin update 18.22 has rolled out to 100% of Garmin Forerunner 965, 955, 265, and 255 watches.
- The update adds a nation-wide track database, a Lap Undo button, a jump rope activity, a Sleep Coach glance, and a number of other features and bug fixes.
- Although the update lists “improved optical heart rate performance” as a fix, some Garmin forum users are complaining about apparent inconsistent HR data since the update.
Garmin has a reputation for accurate optical heart rate data on its smartwatches for users who don't like wearing chest or arm straps. The latest Garmin update 18.22 was supposed to make it even better. Unfortunately, plenty of Garmin watch owners believe the reverse is true.
Garmin posted update 18.22 on its forums, with a list of feature updates we've been eagerly anticipating since its January beta launch. Among them, Garmin promises that the four latest Forerunner models (255, 265, 955, and 965) will get “improved optical heart rate performance in cold weather” after update 18.22.
Elsewhere on the forums, though, you'll find various posts complaining that the heart rate data has become inaccurate, stress and sleep summaries will show gaps in data for no clear reason, and specific actions will cause the Forerunner 965 (or other models) to crash.
Specifically, many users are reporting that their heart rate data falls significantly short of what separate heart rate straps show, topping in the 130–140 bpm range while their actual heart rates are closer to 180–190 bpm.
I intend to test these issues on my own Forerunner 965, but the number of complaints suggests we can't chalk this up to a few isolated incidents. I contacted a Garmin rep for comment and will update this post when I hear back.
It's a shame to hear, as this update adds features that I've been excited to test out. As someone who frequently does track workouts to improve my VO2 Max, I appreciate the new Lap Undo button in case I accidentally start a new lap and ruin my workout data. The same applies to starting a new mile “lap” during regular runs.
Plus, the new “worldwide database of tracks” will give you more accurate lane data as soon as your Garmin Forerunner's GPS detects you're somewhere that another athlete has measured a track activity. I've asked Garmin if it ever intends to make this a public resource, but for now, it's only something that will passively help you track workout accuracy.