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Running track test: How accurately does the sports watch measure?

Michael Restin
18.11.2020
Translation: machine translated

I have suspected for some time that my Amazfit Bip is not always accurate. A test on the running track should show what its data is worth. Spoiler: It's not running smoothly.

I have a relaxed relationship with jogging and don't run to chase personal best times. It's part of it, clears your head and is fun, especially when it's over and the good feeling sets in afterwards. I run, the clock runs with me. I've already expressed my indifference by buying a cheap one with an extremely long battery life.

I take a look at my heart rate. Afterwards, the collected values are data rubbish for me, which the Chinese secret service can interpret for all I care. I already noticed that the measurements are not beyond all doubt when comparing distances with my neighbour, whose iPhone spit out a different distance each time. Acute suspicion of fake news is nothing new in connection with sports watches and fitness trackers.

The problem is that we usually believe the data and don't give it a second thought. GPS navigates us through the world, knows the best routes and exact distances. Hey, GPS! Where were you when I was in the forest? The weather was neither good nor bad, the canopy was no longer particularly dense. Normally, there should be more than enough satellites available to determine my position.

So what was the problem? In which parallel universe was my clone travelling? Why does my running route look like it was scribbled on the screen by a two-year-old? I swear that - apart from the pizza - I was sober and could only be found in a few of these places.

This raises questions. Is Q behind this? Where was Bill Gates at the time? And why did the Mi Fit app support team remain silent in response to my innocent enquiry about how this could have happened? The truth, that much seems clear, is something I have to find out for myself.

Multipath error

GPS drift

The running track test

The lap then appears quite angular. Individual positions stick out and give me an extra 140 metres. Plus 2.8 per cent. Not actually that bad, is it? At least I now know that the Amazfit Bip tends to record too much. I can live with that. But I also don't organise my training plan according to the data from this watch. I don't compete online with others who might get more metres as a gift. To claim that sports watches are accurate would really be presumptuous.

How is it with you? What experiences have you had with the accuracy of your sports watch? Please leave a comment below.

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Simple writer and dad of two who likes to be on the move, wading through everyday family life. Juggling several balls, I'll occasionally drop one. It could be a ball, or a remark. Or both.


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