USING POLAR FT7 IN POOL
HealthyLivingKathy
Posts: 190 Member
I got my FT7 last week and haven't been able to get it to work in the pool. My brother helped me out and found this information, so thought I would share with anyone else wanting a HRM for swimming or working out in the pool. I have ordered my Wearlink (w/o WIND) and trust this will fix the problem. Will let you know once it arrives and I use it.
Taking The Mystery Out Of Choosing The Right Swim Watch For Heart Rate, Laps and Strokes
We've gone to the edges of the earth trying to find the best swim watch combination for those seeking data, especially heart rate data, as well as laps and strokes data.
The task is made a bit tougher by virtue of the fact that so many heart rate monitors use 2.4 GHZ transmission and that just won't play in the water. Enter Polar heart rate monitors to the rescue. The Polar FT1 and Polar FT2 with T31 coded transmitters will get the heart rate measurement job done in real time but they do not have data download capabilities.
To get data download capabilities you can use watches like the Polar FT7, Polar RS300X, Polar RS400 and the accompanying Wearlink chest strap.
The Polar Wearlink WIND chest strap will not work for swimming.
Using the Polar FT7 or Polar RS300X you can use a Polar Flowlink device to download your swimming heart rate data. With the Polar RS400 you will need an IRDA data stick.
The Suunto Memory belt is another great solution for heart rate data capture and subsequent download and it does not even require wearing a watch. The downside is that the data is not visible in real-time but you can download it to Suunto's Training Manager software after-exercise for further analysis and because it is self-contained it captures all the data and uses a USB docking station to transfer it.
Basically any Polar heart rate monitors using either a T31 coded chest strap or a regular Wearlink chest strap will work and then the Suunto Memory belt and that is it. Those are the only ways we know of to get continual heart rate while swim training.
The Swimovate Poolmate swim watch is a great solution for counting laps and strokes and has proven much more reliable than the Oregon Scientific swim watch. We've had several customers buy a Swimovate Poolmate swim watch in combination with a Suunto Memory Belt to get laps, srokes and heart rate during swims and this has worked rather well.
We have tried out tons of swimming watch solutions but we deem those mentioned above to be the most reliable and think you will be very satisfied with any of these as a solution. Sorry the field is not broader, we are constantly looking, but we are committed to telling you what works and getting rid o f the things that do not.
Taking The Mystery Out Of Choosing The Right Swim Watch For Heart Rate, Laps and Strokes
We've gone to the edges of the earth trying to find the best swim watch combination for those seeking data, especially heart rate data, as well as laps and strokes data.
The task is made a bit tougher by virtue of the fact that so many heart rate monitors use 2.4 GHZ transmission and that just won't play in the water. Enter Polar heart rate monitors to the rescue. The Polar FT1 and Polar FT2 with T31 coded transmitters will get the heart rate measurement job done in real time but they do not have data download capabilities.
To get data download capabilities you can use watches like the Polar FT7, Polar RS300X, Polar RS400 and the accompanying Wearlink chest strap.
The Polar Wearlink WIND chest strap will not work for swimming.
Using the Polar FT7 or Polar RS300X you can use a Polar Flowlink device to download your swimming heart rate data. With the Polar RS400 you will need an IRDA data stick.
The Suunto Memory belt is another great solution for heart rate data capture and subsequent download and it does not even require wearing a watch. The downside is that the data is not visible in real-time but you can download it to Suunto's Training Manager software after-exercise for further analysis and because it is self-contained it captures all the data and uses a USB docking station to transfer it.
Basically any Polar heart rate monitors using either a T31 coded chest strap or a regular Wearlink chest strap will work and then the Suunto Memory belt and that is it. Those are the only ways we know of to get continual heart rate while swim training.
The Swimovate Poolmate swim watch is a great solution for counting laps and strokes and has proven much more reliable than the Oregon Scientific swim watch. We've had several customers buy a Swimovate Poolmate swim watch in combination with a Suunto Memory Belt to get laps, srokes and heart rate during swims and this has worked rather well.
We have tried out tons of swimming watch solutions but we deem those mentioned above to be the most reliable and think you will be very satisfied with any of these as a solution. Sorry the field is not broader, we are constantly looking, but we are committed to telling you what works and getting rid o f the things that do not.
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Replies
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I use mine for lap swim and aqua aerobics. The only time i have problems is when the band is tight... if it becomes too lose it won't register.0
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How does it measure your strokes and laps?? I just had to replace my f6 and bought the ft70
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Bump, I just tried doing laps with my new Polar FT7 that just arrived, and it wouldn't register. I'm presuming the belt has to be ultra tight. I'll need to research this more. Thanks for your help.0
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I use my PolarFT7 in the pool and I have not had a problem with anything.0
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Bump, I just tried doing laps with my new Polar FT7 that just arrived, and it wouldn't register. I'm presuming the belt has to be ultra tight. I'll need to research this more. Thanks for your help.
I have an FT4 and I have to tighten it quite a bit more than for non-swimming. Sometimes it still gives me a hard time and I'll just keep pressing it around on my chest until it starts working.0 -
I only have a problem with my FT7 when it isn't tight enough. I've heard there are also problems if the chlorine in the pool is exceptionally high (don't ask me how high though). Something about the chlorine interferes with the sensors. If you are swimming in a public pool that might be the problem.0
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