dual wielding regular watch and a fitness tracker?
dual wielding regular watch and a fitness tracker?
Author
Discussion

cirian75

Original Poster:

4,606 posts

249 months

Friday 25th July
quotequote all
Anyone here dual wielding a regular watch and a fitness tracker.

What issues did you encounter?

Both on one wrist, or one on each wrist.

Reason I ask little ole me has had a heart condition since Oct last year so have been wearing a Garmin 245 so I can track my heart rate 24/7.

But I miss wearing proper watches.

So planning on switching to a Fitbit Charge 6, which is small enough I could dual wield

Discuss.

baysis

74 posts

178 months

Friday 25th July
quotequote all
Have you thought about one of the rings such as Oura 4, if you don’t want two watches have a look at the Whoop 4.0 screenless health tracker.

Edited by baysis on Friday 25th July 08:16

cirian75

Original Poster:

4,606 posts

249 months

Friday 25th July
quotequote all
baysis said:
Have you thought about one of the rings such as Oura 4, if you don t want two watches have a look at the Whoop 4.0 screenless health tracker.

Edited by baysis on Friday 25th July 08:16
I did but unfortunately I have arthritis leading to rather nobly knuckles.

Pebbles167

4,172 posts

168 months

Friday 25th July
quotequote all
I couldn't wear two seperate devices capable of telling the time, it just wouldn't seem right, and wouldn't want to spend most of my time wearing a smart watch so I'd be looking for alternative solutions, though obviously they'd be less convenient.

I've noticed you can get various portable monitors which are linked to and controlled by your phone. Some you can wear and appear as a simple black band, and some are about the size of a matchbox, which you carry in a pocket and place a finger on when desired.

A left field option is to stick a small smart watch on your strap, I've seen it done, though it's a bit odd. You used to be able to buy a Sony one designed for it, but don't think they make them anymore.


Jayho

2,358 posts

186 months

Friday 25th July
quotequote all
I went for the Fitbit Inspire 3. It's the Fitbit with the smallest face I believe. I do tend to wear some sort of beads or bracelet next to it on my right arm to make it more like an accessory. I then wear my proper watch on my left. But please make sure whatever one you choose has the right capabilities for your needs. I only noticed after buying that the Inspire 3 is a bit lighter than other fitbits. But not a show stopper for my requirements.

I did have my Pixel Watch on one wrist and real watch on the other for a while. Didn't like that as it was too "watch" like, plus the battery life was terrible.

baysis

74 posts

178 months

Friday 25th July
quotequote all
The Whoop 4 is just a wrist band, no screen and has very good health capabilities.

Baroque attacks

5,765 posts

202 months

Friday 25th July
quotequote all
Is a Daytona and an Apple Watch Ultra a bit too much hehe

Different wrists, obviously. smile

No real issues, other than some people thinking you care that they think you’re a bit odd biggrin

ChocolateFrog

32,281 posts

189 months

Friday 25th July
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Do any of the rings do heart rate?

2 watches sounds a bit too eccentric for me.

There's also the Garmin Marq, which is a bit more dressy than a normal smart watch.

Smurfsarepeopletoo

944 posts

73 months

Friday 25th July
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I wear a Samsung smart watch, and then a Samsung ring, the main reason for the ring is to monitor things like heart rate when I sleep following a heart attack.

SlimJim16v

6,917 posts

159 months

Friday 25th July
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cirian75 said:
So planning on switching to a Fitbit Charge 6, which is small enough I could dual wield
This is what I wear, one on each wrist. With the display off the charge is just a black band.

AB

18,536 posts

211 months

Friday 25th July
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Oura Ring 4 negates the need for a double wristing.

SlimJim16v

6,917 posts

159 months

Friday 25th July
quotequote all
There is also the Polar Verity Sense which goes on your upper arm. I think it's just a heart rate tracker though.

InitialDave

13,465 posts

135 months

Friday 25th July
quotequote all
Pebbles167 said:
I couldn't wear two seperate devices capable of telling the time, it just wouldn't seem right, and wouldn't want to spend most of my time wearing a smart watch so I'd be looking for alternative solutions, though obviously they'd be less convenient.

I've noticed you can get various portable monitors which are linked to and controlled by your phone. Some you can wear and appear as a simple black band, and some are about the size of a matchbox, which you carry in a pocket and place a finger on when desired.

A left field option is to stick a small smart watch on your strap, I've seen it done, though it's a bit odd. You used to be able to buy a Sony one designed for it, but don't think they make them anymore.

That makes me think... or maybe it's exactly what you're posting about and I'm misunderstanding...

Does anyone make a strap with a "smart clasp" so you can have a lot of these functions added to any watch with 20mm lugs?

fizzwheel

217 posts

142 months

Friday 25th July
quotequote all
baysis said:
The Whoop 4 is just a wrist band, no screen and has very good health capabilities.
That was the way I tackled it, as I did not want to "double wrist"

jimothyc

668 posts

100 months

Friday 25th July
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Harry Metcalffe seems to pull off the double watch routine without too much of an issue

Stanley Rous

110 posts

225 months

Friday 25th July
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Ordinarily I wouldn’t want something on each wrist but surely after a heart condition, health takes priority.

Anyway, a few people have suggested Whoop which may well give you what you need and has a bicep band available so as it’s off your wrist. For a really left field suggestion, they also do sportswear clothing with some kind of sensor integration so you don’t have to wear the band. Could wear the running shorts as underwear. Like I said, a bit leftfield!

I had a Whoop for a while but knocked it on the head as missed my watch and didn’t want to wear both. That and I didn’t like the data telling me I’d had another st nights sleep but still had to go to work.

Macneil

1,003 posts

96 months

Friday 25th July
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I would ask your doctor if you need to wear a smartwatch

Bob_Defly

4,842 posts

247 months

Saturday 26th July
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I used to do this. Normal watch on left wrist, tracker on right.

Couldn't be bothered with the tracker in the end, I do more than 10K steps every day anyway so I ditched it. It did feel a bit weird wearing two watches.

jdw100

5,432 posts

180 months

Monday 28th July
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Wear one around around your ankle?

Dolf Stoppard

1,370 posts

138 months

Monday 28th July
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IMO two watches just looks odd. Whoop or Fitbit and traditional watch is fine.