Krysta Coleman wrote:Hey, I have a question for you runner/ergers... I want to start running as cross-training for my erging, and also because a road relay team has asked me to be a back-up for them. I have become pretty addicted to the nice numbers and feedback you constantly get on the PM3 whilst erging so I was thinking of getting one of those GPS watches that tell you pace, distance, etc for running.
Anyone tried one of these? Any recommendations before I make the big purchase? I am looking at a Garmin Forerunner 305, because I want HR data too.
Thanks,
- Krysta
Krysta
I have had my Forerunner 301 for round 5 weeks now. I probably would not have bought such an expensive piece of kit, but I sold a book on Ebay which funded it!!
Anyway, my thoughts.
Accuracy is pretty good, Garmin quote 99% with good sky sight, sounds good, but could still be 100 metres out in 10K.
I have used it on 3 certified courses, a 10K which the Garmin clocked 90 metres over, others on the day varied between 6.20, 6.21 and 6.27 so OK for training purposes. A local 3K, I clocked 20 metres over, this was a straight out and back course, so pretty good. 3 mile race with tree cover clocked 3.17 miles, way out.
Training routes pretty consistent. I have ran a loop 3 times and have clocked 7.24 twice and a 7.27 once, excellent stuff.
Despite already having a HRM I went for the 301 model, this has been one of the best tools for me for checking HRs after a race/training run.
in 25 years of running I have very rarely used a HRM, I know when I am red lining by feel. As I have got older the 301 has told me, I haven’t been pushing hard enough in training or racing.
The metres climbed etc seems way out, as well as the altitude, perhaps it needs setting at sea level first?
I have messed about with navigation during a walking few days, I set some locations on the route, then on the way back set the machine to retrace. It was very good, the turns I set were indicated by an arrow and pretty spot on. It could be useful on unfamiliar territory to retrace steps.
There is a function to set location, which gives latitude and longitude, although I am unsure how to relate this to the map if lost, any body know. I know about 6 figure references etc, but not lat/long!
I have tried the virtual assistant once, this is a running man you set to the speed you want to run at, it then gives a plus or minus as you race the assistant. I set it on a one mile route for 6.20pace, it worked well, finished within seconds, it was easy to see too on the display.
The pace can seem to vary quite a bit, I can run very even paced, normally within seconds, I am trying out the pace smoothing still on the watch to try and iron this out, It does seem to settle more, the longer a run goes, I wonder if it works similar to the PM2/PM3 as in the projected pace scenario, the longer the distance, the less the spikes?
The watch looks a bit bulky, but when worn is not noticed, there is an extension strap, so you can wear it over a heavier top. The custom pages are useful to view info you prefer. The USB hook up to PC is simple, it also charges from there as well as the mains. Software is limited, you can check HRs against speed/elevation etc. I have mine to auto insert mile splits, so you can analyse individual sections. HR tracking is very good with the coded transmitter, also battery is user replaceable.
You also can used Motion Based software, but unless you pay monthly and can only save 10 workouts. I have exported some runs to Google Earth, which look quite impressive, and can be replayed. One anomaly is the 7.24 I did today becomes 7.27 with this software??
There are still lots of features I haven’t tried, will keep you posted.
Steve