Which wearable is best for training control?
It depends on your priorities. Garmin for outdoor sports and running, Whoop for recovery focus without a display, Oura Ring for sleep, Apple Watch for all-around use with smartphone integration. All measure heart rate and heart rate variability (HRV) accurately enough for effective monitoring.
How accurate are wearable heart rate measurements?
Chest straps are very accurate (similar to an ECG). Wrist sensors are good for stable activities but can be inaccurate during rapid movements or with a poor fit. For critical data (HRV measurement), a chest strap or ring is often better.
Can I achieve the same results with a cheaper tracker?
Basic information (steps, approximate heart rate, sleep duration) is fine. Premium devices are better for precise HRV, detailed sleep phases, and sophisticated algorithms. But: a cheaper tracker is better than none.
What constitutes a good HRV?
It's highly individual – anything from 20 to 100ms is considered 'normal'. What's more important is your personal trend. If your baseline is 50ms and you rise to 60ms, that's progress. Only compare yourself to your own results.
Should I avoid training if my HRV is low?
Not necessarily. Light activity is almost always okay. Intense exertion might not. HRV is one data point, not the only criterion. Combine it with your subjective feeling.
How reliable are sleep phase measurements?
Less reliable than laboratory polysomnography. However, the trend over time is useful, even if individual nights are not perfectly captured. Use it as a guideline, not as absolute truth.
Can wearable tracking become too much?
Yes. Some people become obsessed with data and stress about every fluctuation. If the numbers cause anxiety, track less. Data should help, not burden.
Do I need to check the data every day?
Not necessarily. A quick daily check-in can help with training adjustments. But the weekly trend is often more important than any single day. Find your balance.
How long will it take me to establish my baseline?
Approximately 2-4 weeks of consistent wear are needed for a meaningful baseline. HRV takes time to measure because it is variable. Patience at the beginning pays off.
Can wearables replace a trainer?
No. The data shows WHAT is happening, not always WHY or WHAT TO DO. A good coach interprets the data in context, gives individual recommendations, and sees what wearables don't capture.