Polar H10 - ANT+ Bluetooth Waterproof
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AED
51400
AED
77700
-33%
Key Features
- Substance: Polyester
- Product colour: Black
- Weight: 60g
- Country of origin: Malaysia
Specifications
Features
Country of origin
Malaysia
Product colour
Black
Substance
Polyester
Weight & dimensions
Weight
60 g
Product Details
Buy Polar H10 Heart Rate Monitor Chest Strap - ANT + Bluetooth,
Waterproof HR Sensor for Men and Women, Orange, M-XXL: Everything
Else - desertcart.com ✓ FREE DELIVERY possible on eligible
purchases
Review: Super accurate HR Sensor Strap! - I went looking and
while others were really good choices too; when it comes to
accuracy Polar heart rate sensors and straps are highly rated
across the board, compatible with pretty much everything, and are
durable. I was particularly impressed with the in-depth research
and testing they do with their equipment, neutral comparisons
that they make with other comparable HR sensors as well as
certified medical heart rate monitoring. I started leaning toward
the Polar H10 , which are the 5th generation of Polar's Heart
Rate tech, which started in 1977. According to Polar's testing
against medical-grade heart rate equipment and other heart rate
sensors - the ECG H10 sensor detects HR within 2 ms accuracy at
92.9% for running, 99.3% for cycling, 95.3% for weight training,
95.6% for all activities combined. Amazing accuracy, and very
much as good or better than the informal tests I have done of
previous HR sensors and straps that I have had - my tests being
comparing them to other equipment as well as manually using the
old tried and true 'two fingers on the neck or wrist and a watch'
method. This sensor IS quite wide and extends across a large part
of the strap, this entire section is the HR sensor area. The H10
can do two Bluetooth conenctions, with ANT+ both will connect to
multiple ANT+ channels and there is a proprietary GymLink
connection also - which connects to some fitness devices. The H10
can be used with any device underwater. The H10 has an internal
memory that can save one training session on its own and can be
accessed with one of the Polar apps like Polar's Beat app. The
H10 works with pretty much everything and anything that we use
for fitness nowadays. Anything that receives Bluetooth (Bluetooth
4.0 and Bluetooth BLE) or ANT+ and the Gymlink 5 kHz signals. It
will output Bluetooth and ANT+ at the same time and even two
Bluetooth devices at the same time. This of course includes
watches by nearly all manufacturers as well as nearly all bike
computers (not including non-smart old-style bike
speedometers/odometers without ANT+ and Bluetooth), and any
smartphone. This list is extensive. The HR sensor is not
rechargeable but uses the common 2025 battery, Polar says that it
lasts 400 hours. One thing you may want to do to extend battery
life (recommended by Polar themselves and individuals who have
used it over time) is to pop up one of the sensor pod's
connectors out of the strap so that it goes to sleep, I have
tested it many hours after I have stopped an activity and taken
off the chest strap, and sometimes it still is transmitting. So
this is something to keep in mind. The battery is easy to change,
via what looks at first glance to be a quarter-turn battery hatch
that you turn with a coin to open but it actually is quite
different, as it snaps open with a little tab. The battery door
is of course sealed with an o-ring and everything seems very
tight and secure. The total weight with the strap is 60 grams
with the sensor pod itself being 12 grams by itself. The soft
strap is very easy to put on, wet it with a little water so the
sensor can get good contact with your chest skin (you can wait
for a little sweat to do it for you but then the sensor may not
read well until that happens). You position the sensor monitor
pod itself in the front of your chest, which puts the long wide
sensor strap in a very good position all across your chest. This
sensor area is quite extensively wide to give you that nice
accuracy. You could even position this fairly inaccurately and it
may still probably work - whether you positioned it by accident
or deliberately as perhaps the strap does not fit you well for
whatever reason. Some people do have problems with chest straps
for many reasons, so I think those who do might find this works
better than other chest straps with smaller sensor areas. It even
works if you get it too low or too high on your chest, within a
reasonable range. There are little rubbery dots on the strap
itself to keep it in place. Does this actually make it work
better? I don't know, but it seems like a great idea. I have
never had one move on me so I can't say whether this makes any
difference to me personally, but perhaps to others who have
issues with HR chest straps staying in place, it might be just
the thing to help. The latch snaps into place easily with one end
snapping directly into the other end, to take it off you push a
button on the latch and it disengages easily. The button is
slightly recessed so you never accidentally pop it off (at least
I have not as yet) and also won't get squeezed even by a tight
jersey or compression shirt. The strap is very adjustable, with a
conventional adjustable loop system to tighten or loosen it.
There are two size options for the strap when you order - XS/S
and M/XXL. The smaller one covers chests 20-30 inches (58-71 cm)
in diameter while the larger one goes from 30-45 inches (67-95
cm). While riding or running or lifting or anything else I can't
even feel it unless I consciously make myself aware of it. The
Polar H10 sensor monitor is easily cleaned with a little dish
soap and water, and a quick wipe to dry it. The soft strap is
also very easy to clean with soap and water, or you can put it in
a washer - though I recommend using a small washer bag to keep it
from snarling and getting bent around other things, and maybe
air-dry it instead of using a dryer Make sure you take the sensor
off first of course. The soft strap now comes in not only the
standard black but a burgundy with a design on it. The H10 is
fully waterproof and can be used underwater for swimming and
other things, up to 30 meters deep. And you don't need your watch
or phone with you for swimming or anything else, at least for one
session as the internal memory can store one workout. To set this
up you use the Polar Beat app so you do have to connect it to
your phone first, set it up and then you can use the strap
without the phone present or nearby. When you are finished you
reconnect and download the sensor data to the Polar Beat app,
which can upload it to a few other sites or allow a download. The
Polar Beat app also can be used to keep the firmware updated,
check battery power, etc. And there are a number of workouts and
such that you can use it for. The Polar Beat app can also
estimate your Vo2 Max, you find this in the app under Upgrades
(not sure why - as it's a free option) and then under Fitness
Test. It estimated mine at 49, somewhat above what other fitness
services estimates mine at but very close. Also, the Polar Flow
app is another app with training and syncing to other services.
And of course any other device you sync it to will have it's own
abilities when connected to the Polar H10. You can even test your
HRV (Heart Rate Variability), which is a good test of your health
and recovery. You could use this as a 24-hour monitor with the
right app, I suppose, but the H10 is really meant for exercise.
But if you wanted to test your HR and HRV over an extended period
of time you could. I think it would be comfortable sleeping,
depending on the person, but it's not really made for that and
it's possible that the sensor area might dry out over such a long
period of inactivity. Lastly, I was going to include some
comparison charts between the H10 and other HR monitors that I
have but, outside of a few dropouts by optical heart rate sensors
because of arm movement - which is to be expected, they all
performed within pretty much identically. I had to really go data
point by data point comparisons to see much difference. So in
conclusion I would very highly recommend the Polar H10 - you are
not going to be disappointed in accuracy, comfort, usability,
connectivity, and compatibility. UPDATE Spring 2023 - For the
last few months the output has become increasingly erratic with
low heart rate readings. I have tried to wash the strap as much
as I could and added extra moisture to the sensor pads, and even
electrode gel. Both things seemed to help for a while, yet the
strap became more and more intermittent over time, despite
washing and using the electrode gel. It had to be thoroughly
washed in the washing machine after each use for it to have any
chance of working halfway decent. Once I started biking outside a
few times it went in the opposite direction and started sometimes
showing super-high HR readings. I was going to send it back to
Polar for warranty but it seemed obvious that it was the strap
and not the sensor itself, and instead of paying the shipping
cost to send it back for warranty I decided to just buy a cheap
replacement strap. That did the trick and it works perfectly and
reliably again. The replacement maybe isn't as nice as Polar's
but the important thing is that it works, I will see what the
durability is for it.
Review: This thing works as a great replacement to my Garmin HRM
dual - Bought this to replace a crappy Garmin chest strap. So far
this thing beats it every single way possible. I'll give a little
bit of a comparison below as to how it stacks up to the Garmin
HRM dual. The strap. I'm a big boy at 275 pounds so I bought the
larger strap to go with the unit. The garmin strap was trash. Too
thin and soft and so it just rolled up with movement. The Polar
strap is a little firmer though so it can better stay flat
without rolling up. This is huge when it comes to comfort as when
the strap rolls up it will dig into your skin a little more. The
Polar strap I could probably wear all day long without issue. The
unit itself - Big win for Polar. The Garmin unit at first
wouldn't detect my heart rate. Tried all the tricks from
submerging it in water, licking the pads, getting all sweaty and
then trying it. Nothing. Only way I was able to get it to work
was buying conductive gel and using that on the pads. Next
problem was once I started working out I had about 20-30 minutes
before it quit working. What sucks is you wouldn't know it though
as it doesn't display 0. Instead, it just keeps displaying the
same heart rate that it was able to detect. This kind of sucks
though as your heart rate could be very different, but you would
never know. what makes it even worse is once the unit quits
working, that's it for the next couple hours. It WILL NOT WORK no
matter what you do. Dry the strap out, clean the strap and pads,
apply more gel, apply less gel, dunk the strap, dry it out again.
NOTHING! Had this happen during Full Frontal 4DP test by The
Sufferfest by Wahoo. Figured it was just a fluke and I'll try
again. Once again half way through the test it just quits and
will not work for the next couple hours. That's a pretty crappy
deal to get half way through that test and then just have the
heart rate quit working invalidating the whole test. Figured ok
maybe it's just too much. maybe I'm sweating too much, maybe my
heart rate is going wonky. Who knows. Lets just do a normal
training run instead that's hopefully not quite as intensive.
Again 20-30 minutes in it would just quit. This happened EVERY
SINGLE TIME for any type of ride I did. This is kind of
worthless. You get through any warm up, and just starting on the
actual workout at which point the unit bricks itself and won't
work for the next couple hours. The Polar unit on the other hand
worked right from the start. I have never used the conductive gel
with unit. Hell I don't even have to wet the strap down or
anything. I just put it on and start riding.Don't think I have
had it actually drop out during an exercise. I have tested it
though to see what would happen if it does quit detecting my
heart rate by lifting up one side of the pads of my chest. This
is another huge win in that if it does quit detecting your heart
rate this will show 0. Very much unlike the garmin still
displaying the last heart rate detected which is incorrect. Even
if that heart rate was from 10 minutes ago. The polar unit also
has the ability to be used through third party apps to detect
your heart rate variability and such. You can even download apps
so you can actually see the electrical signal from your heart if
you really wanted to though I have no way to confirm how accurate
that is. It's just the fact that Polar opens this up for use like
that unlike the garmin is a huge win. Overall I wouldn't bother
with the Garmin unit. If you are unsure which to buy, just guy
the polar H10. Much better unit over all in every way.
Reviews
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