Good, basic heart rate monitor

« Back to Previous Page
0
Posted by riazm (Questions: 1, Answers: 1)
Asked on June 25, 2011 8:28 am
9808 Views

I've been slowly building up my running distance to 10K using the podrunner intervals series, but sometimes I feel like I'm having difficulty pacing myself and am completing my run with a surplus amount of gas in the tank. I imagine a heart rate monitor would help with this, it would also provide me with some numbers to put in a graph to make myself feel good about my progress.

I was hoping to find something that I could program with interval training programmes (for after I finish the available podrunner ones} that would report back my effort and distance covered. I suppose I'll spend whatever is necessary, though I'm not an athlete by any means and don't want to feel like I'm using a chainsaw to prune the roses.

0
Posted by pelicanhook (Questions: 0, Answers: 5)
Answered On June 27, 2011 9:14 am

You can get a MIO Stride by Physica-Calvery inexpensively to try out a basic monitor. It also has a pedometer function that is fairly accurate. The downside is that it's sensitive to being stuck in a sleeve and resetting the time.

Good luck

0
Posted by cas (Questions: 0, Answers: 1)
Answered On March 19, 2012 2:50 pm

Question - do you have the iphone? iphone 4S? Because if you look at Wahoo Fitness, you can add their HR and the Runmeter app. I use this and really recommend it. If you have the iphone 4s, you can get the low power bluetooth wireless HR belt for about 70 bucks and it integrates seamlessly with this and many other fitness apps,

I used to run by feel, but this year, after a comprehensive treadmill test and getting an iphone 4s, I've gotten really into being more aware of the data, dumping maps and times into my calendar, and re-focusing training. If you have an older iphone, you can use a ANT enabled heart rate monitor. I also recommend getting some accurate data on your max heart rate to set up your training zones as well.

You could, of course, buy a Garmin or Polar, but having heart rate monitoring integrated into a good running app is more convenient, an integrated solution that allows you to get prompts in your headphones, graphs of your HR data with all the other data - pace, splits, maps, etc. so all your running information is in one place, with a good UI. I really like these two newish companies, Wahoo and Abvio

All of this, of course, depends on you having the smartphone to begin with. If you are an android user, look at Runkeeper but for the iPhone, i use

Runmeter

Wahoo Fitness HR

« Back to Previous Page