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Suunto t6c Heart Rate Monitor and Fitness Trainer Watch (Fusion) | 
| Brand: Suunto Category: Sports Department: mens
List Price: $429.00 Buy New: $282.95 as of 7/30/2010 03:30 CDT details You Save: $146.05 (34%)
New (12) Used (2) from $243.07
Seller: Outdoor Gear Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 40469
Color: Fusion Media: Watch Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Band Material: elastometer Case Diameter: 47 Case Material: composite Clasp: Buckle Dial Color: Black/red plastic integrated round case Dial Window Material Type: Mineral Watch Movement Type: Quartz Water Resistance Depth: 30 Size: One Size Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 6.4 x 5.3 x 3.4 heart-rate-monitor stop-watch timer
MPN: SS013580010 Model: SS013580010 UPC: 045235900107 EAN: 2001331060020 ASIN: B001415E9G
Release Date: February 14, 2008 Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Professional-caliber heart rate monitor watch in contemporary fusion color | | • | Displays current heart rate, average heart rate, and calories burned | | • | Training Effect function measures how hard your body is working | | • | Training Manager PC software provides detailed analysis of training | | • | Interference-free digital ANT transmission; water-resistant to 330 feet; 2-year warranty |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Product Description Reaching your goals can be tough. It takes the right tools, knowledge, and guidance to improve with each training session. Enter the Suunto t6c heart rate monitor and fitness trainer watch, a professional-grade training tool for monitoring, analyzing, and optimizing your workouts. The t6c is equipped with a bundle of valuable features, but none is more valuable than its correspondence with the included Suunto Training Manager PC software, which provides a detailed analysis of seven physiological parameters with an accuracy previously available only in sports laboratories. This analysis breaks down nearly every aspect of your training, so you can make adjustments and train more efficiently in the future. The t6c also tracks your real-time Training Effect, a quick and accurate measurement of how hard your body is working at any given moment. By knowing your Training Effect, you'll enjoy a more intimate understanding of your body's workout "sweet spot," an essential tidbit if you want to achieve your targets without setting yourself back by under- or over-training. The Training Effect works intuitively: The watch first notes the info from your personal fitness profile, and then analyzes your physiological progress and translates the data into a simple one-to-five scale. For example, if you want to improve your aerobic fitness at a moderate tempo, you should exercise until your TE meter reads between 3.0 and 3.9, two to four times per week. To improve your aerobic condition more rapidly--but without the risk of over-training--you should push yourself harder once or twice per week, so your TE meter reads 4.0 to 4.9, with a few recovery sessions in the TE 1.0 to 2.0 range. The Training Effect is relative to each individual. While a novice runner might achieve a TE of 4.0 on a four-mile jog, a professional runner might have to complete an uphill marathon to get the same reading. In other words, both runners will have to exercise hard to achieve a TE of 4.0. The t6c includes a couple of additional features that put it above and beyond traditional heart rate monitor watches. For example, the t6c gives you a readout of your excess post-exercise oxygen consumption level (EPOC), letting you measure and adjust your training loads to ensure that your body is safely getting the most from each workout. And users will love the built-in altimeter, which lets you monitor your climbing or hill performance to know how your body will react when training at various altitudes. Finally, the Suunto t6c offers interference-free digital ANT transmission, making it easy to pair your heart rate monitor with the included Suunto comfort belt. You can also use this secure connection to monitor your speed, distance, or cadence by pairing your Suunto t6c with an optional Suunto training pod. Training pods are small units that attach to such items as a running shoe or a bike to calculate your speed, distance, and even pedal revolutions per minute while you exercise. Pods are ideal for athletes who aren't satisfied with half-hearted training efforts, but really want to monitor their training routines down to the last detail. Specifications: - Color: Fusion
- Measures vertical speed: Yes
- Real-time vertical cumulative value: Yes
- Temperature compensation: Yes
- Total ascent/descent: Yes
- Resolution: 1 meter
- Recording intervals: 2 seconds, 10 seconds
- Altimeter/barometer lock: Yes
- Altitude range: -1,600 to 29,500 feet
- Countdown timer: Yes
- Stopwatch: Yes
- Max number of split times in memory: 99
- Timers (interval and warm-up): Yes
- Average heart rate: Real time
- Training effect: Real time
- Calories: Real time
- ANT digital coded signal: Yes
- Memory capacity: 25 logs/100,000 beats
- PC analysis: Yes, with 7 body parameters
- EPOC: Yes
- HR limits and HR zones: Yes
- Suunto heart rate belt: Compatible, sold separately
- Suunto comfort belt: Included
- Suunto memory belt: Compatible, sold separately
- Water resistance: 330 feet
- Selectable metric/imperial units: Yes
- Menu-based user interface: Yes
- Dot-matrix display: Yes
- Backlight type: Electro-luminescent display
- Backlight option for night use: Yes
- User-replaceable strap: Yes
- Software: Suunto Training Manager (included)
- Low battery warning: Yes
- User-replaceable battery: Yes
- Suunto Coach personal training program: No
- Customizable display: Yes
- Button lock: Yes
- Compatible with pods: Yes
- Watch: 12/24 hour
- Calendar clock: Yes
- Dual time: Yes
- Daily alarms: 3
Manufacturer's Warranty Two-year warranty About Suunto Suunto was founded in 1936 by outdoors man and a keen orienteering enthusiast, Tuomas Vohlonen, who had long been bothered by a problem: the inaccuracy of traditional dry compasses and their lack of steady needle operation. Being an engineer with an inventive turn of mind, he discovered and patented the production method for a much steadier needle, better readings, and a new level of accuracy. By 1950 the company was exporting compasses to over 50 countries around the world, including Canada and the United States. In 1952, Helsinki was hosting the Olympic Games, and the torches carried to light the Olympic flame were Suunto products. The next step was improving the stability and accuracy of marine compasses. The first marine compass, the Suunto K-12, was launched onto the market in 1953. In 1957, Suunto started manufacturing hypsometers, which measure the height of trees. In the 1960s, the compass range grew further and Suunto introduced its first diving compass--initiated by the divers themselves. A British sports diver attached a Suunto compass to his wrist and found that the device also worked underwater. Thanks to his feedback and initiatives, the new business category was found. Suunto's exports and business grew steadily and Suunto then focused on combining its strength in precision mechanics with new skills in electronics. Accuracy, reliability, and ruggedness have been Suunto's key values from the very beginning of the company history. Today, Suunto is a leading designer and manufacturer of sports instruments for training, diving, mountaineering, hiking, skiing, sailing, and golf. True to its roots, Suunto is today the world's biggest compass manufacturer. Prized for their design, accuracy and dependability, Suunto sports instruments combine the aesthetics and functionality of watches with sport-specific computers that help athletes at all levels analyze and improve performance. Headquartered in Vantaa, Finland, Suunto employs more than 500 people worldwide and distributes its products to nearly 60 countries. The company is a subsidiary of Helsinki-based Amer Sports Corporation with the sister brands Wilson, Salomon, Atomic, Precor, and Mavic.
Product Description t6c Heart Rate Monitor-Fushion
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
Full of features May 21, 2010 JORGE BECK (Panama, David, Chiriqui) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a very reliable HRM, full of technology, easy to use. Don`t relay on the backlight if you are running with very low daylight or at night, for the most, this is very good training parntner. I`m sure that using it with the right POD`s you will be pleasant of the feature that give you at a glance. Right size also, not to big, not to small. Very clear data on tne face and other advantage is that give you 3 rows of instant information, the way you prefer to see it (have differents options on this). Train smart, thupms up for Suunto T6c.
T6c poor quality December 15, 2009 Timothy Schilling (Gap, FRANCE) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I owned the T3 watch for 3 years and was impressed with its functionality and durability. I wanted some new features so I bought the T6c from Outdoors Gear via Amazon in October. I have used it 2-3 times a week for nearly three months and suddenly I'm having a lot of problems with getting it to pair properly with the heart rate strap. It will be working fine when I leave the house and then in the middle of my run, it goes blank and no longer reads the heart data. I have followed instructions on "re-pairing" but with poor results. I called their service center and they are all busy and rushed. I find the product concept good but it looks like SUUNTO is taking short cuts on quality parts and quality control in their factory. A $500 heart rate monitor watch that breaks after 3 months is cause for concern. I'm stuck with it now and have to follow the SUUNTO 'busy' service plan to eventually get my watch back which is a HUGE hassle considering the product price and reputation of the company. Be careful, it looks like SUUNTO is getting sloppy!
Very Happy but fustrated... June 7, 2009 W. Marquardt (Chicago) Upon receiving the T6c I was excited to try it but soon became fustrated. Am disappointed in the user manual you have to play with it. Am very satisfied after figuring it out but the included software is lacking, though this has been pointed out by others. Overall would recomend just make sure you have time to play with it.
Works great and my workouts are better February 23, 2009 Dr. Natural (Santa Fe, NM) 12 out of 14 found this review helpful
I have had the fusion for about a week now - perhaps it's premature to write a review, but I can't find any sticking points to keep me from loving this watch/HRM.
I am not a "pro" or even a "die hard", but I wanted to take my athleticism to a new level. I had dinked around with several Polar models, and even a Nike because that's what the local running store sells. It took me a long, long time and alot of reading to get up the courage to enter the market at this price point, but I gotta say I am glad I did.
I was considering the Forerunner but the idea that you had to charge it every couple of days was off-putting. Still, the Suunto was a big investment, especially given the ambiguous reviews here on Amazon. I swallowed hard and did it eyes wide open.
You know something? Not one single negative thing listed in these reviews happened. The backlight isn't that bad - I can read the watch clearly at night in bed. The software isn't that bad - I did buy the FirstBeat program and I like it better, but not to the detriment of the equipment. How much information can you really use? I'm not in that league. There is a seamless connection between all the pods I use (several at the same time if you include the heart rate belt - how DO they get that thing to be so accurate and so THIN and comfortable???). And when I run on the treadmill I can check my heartrate with the handgrips and they match to the beat.
There is only one minor caveat - I am pretty good with technology but not good at reading the instructions. I got stuck and decided to call customer support and was on hold for about 15 minutes - long enough for me to read the instructions (duh!) and solve the problem easily myself and hang up before somebody answered. But I knew that might be the reality before I bought the watch and you should too. Still, I got everything right without help.
And here is an irony - it's the watch and the excitment about going to the next level that inspires me to run even more, rather than vice versa. See, I was having a blast training hard but when I actually got to LOOK at what was going on, it turned out I wasn't nearly as efficient as I thought I was. So, I go home now, scope it out, and adjust my workout according to the results, and see what happens. I go in this stepwise fashion and my workouts are better.
All in all, it was really worth it to me. I hope I didn't jinx it by writing such a glowing review so soon, but in my experience, if things are going to go wrong with electronics they go wrong pretty fast. So far they haven't and I don't expect they will.
Wrist unit is ok, Training Software is defective February 4, 2009 J. Gardner (Connecticut) 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
The wrist unit seem to work well, is comfortable on my skinny wrist and fairly easy to figure out how to operate. It feels solid and has a quality feel. The chest belt has smooth rubber at the contact points rather than fabric like the Polar models I've used. This makes it harder to moisten and establish a good contact because the water beads up on the rubber. I think this is the cause of occasional erratic spikes in the HR readings before I am thoroughly warmed up and sweating. This introduces an inaccuracy in the calculated Training Effect values. My real complaint is with the Training Manager software. Various functions as described in the Suunto literature are absent. Others are there but don't work. For example it is impossible to tag a session with the type of activity such as running, biking etc. When I contacted Suunto I was told that there are known bugs in the program and they intend to fix it at some point but could not provide a date. From what I could tell the program it is of limited value anyway. Although it creates interesting graphs and provides more detail than the wrist unit can, it doesn't help you "manage" your training by giving guidance as to how conduct your training to reach a goal. Should my next session be hard, say a Training Effect 4, or am I overdoing it and need to take it easy with a TE 1 or 2? Go read a book for the answer because the Training Manager is no help. It is advertised as a "sports laboratory on your wrist" but if it does only what I can make it do then it needs a coach to accompany it. I did not buy the running or bike sensors so cannot comment on how they work. Also, Suunto software only works with Windows and there are no plans to accommodate Mac users according to Suunto.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
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