Polar FT80 – Review

The FT80 Heart Rate Monitor Watch From Polar: Great For The Gym

Polar FT80 is a fitness watch targeted at multi-sport fitness buffs attempting to attain holistic fitness goals and is suited to multi-sport athletes, meaning individuals that rotate between endurance days, lifting days, calisthenic days, and everything else imaginable. The Polar FT80 heart rate monitor provides very good features for both aerobic and weight exercise, while additionally being capable to connect to GPS and running sensors.

Product Features

  • Graphical Guidance (shows you exactly when your body is ready to do your next exercise set/interval)
  • Polar STAR® feature (creates training targets based on previous workouts)
  • Polar Strength Training (shows when body is ready to do next weights set)
  • Polar OwnZone®, ZoneLock® and ZonePointer® (helps to remain in specific heart rate zone)
  • Polar OwnCode® Transmission (prevents interference)
  • Polar Fitness Test (determines you fitness level)
  • Polar OwnCal® (displays calorie expenditure)
  • Heart rate displayed as a percentage, bpm or graph
  • Upload data to polarpersonaltrainer.com

Running & Cycling Features

The Polar FT80 heart rate monitor can be linked to:

  • Foot Pod (Running speed/distance)
  • Polar G1 GPS Sensor (Speed/distance for outdoor sports)

The FT80 is a tremendous watch for gymnasium exercise and lifting exercise but the FT80 truly was off target on display screen contrast, this can make the monitor tricky to read in brilliant sun. White script against a black backdrop are tough to see in brilliant light. This aspect is the one considerable downside if you work out outside on many brilliant, sunny days and it instantaneously reduced a star from the monitors ranking in our view.

Alright,so at this point you understand the largest downside connected to the FT80 and we will dig in to all the features that are truly impressive with reference to this heart rate monitor.

It provides a custom display of recuperation period, identified as graph feedback, and it is tremendous for lifting. Perfecting recuperation periods, sandwiched between repititions, and is critical to realizing the greatest benefit from your weight work outs and the FT80 is outstanding in this regard. Not one other heart rate monitor we’ve tested provides this attribute and it creates meaningful value in your exercise, knowing exactly at what time to start in on your next series to acquire the greatest benefit. We would give back a star for this trait only, however, we were in a critical mind set on the date of our examination.

Training Star is an additionally impressive attribute that renders weekly exercise goals based upon your preceding exercise. Go get new exercises directly from Polar’s website.

The chest strap works well and helps keep your watch from picking up the data of other exercisers in close proximity, this is critical because this is where we think the FT80 truly excels. We advocate the FT80 strongly for competitive health club fanatics as a result of of the out-of-doors drawbacks attributable to display screen readability in vivid light conditions.

The chest band is, furthermore, one of the best chest belts that we have tried and being able to remove the sensor to wash down the chest belt is a great feature. If you desire to get liberated of your band completely the sensors work with Numetrex pulse-sensing muscle shirts and cardio bras. These unique pieces of clothing contain heart-sensing clothe and you can attach the transmitter directly to the garment and presto, you lose the strap.

Our combined appraisal is that the FT80 is a great monitor for competitive fitness enthusiasts but that this device is best not included for outside fitness routines on bright days. This is why we assign the monitor a 3.75 star ranking out of five stars. If your foremost focal point is on gymnasium connected working out then we would give out a thumbs up on this monitor.


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4 Responses to “Polar FT80 – Review”

  1. Kipu Nerek says:

    I believe when you need a dictionary to read the first paragraph of a blog post, you really wouldn’t want to continue, especially when you’re in a rush.

  2. Kipu Nerek says:

    Thank you for a very clear and helpful post. I am definitely a violator of many of these rules. I often find myself conflicted when writing a blog post because I see myself writing more than people want to read, but I feel that I have to do the subject matter justice by thoroughly covering it. I feel that by following some of these rules I end up cutting out important aspects to the discussion. I guess you have to find a balance.

  3. Home Gym says:

    When we learn, as a society, to value exercise and fitness as much as we value convenience and mindless entertainment (or neterteinment), we’ll be a lot better off.

    I created a home gym a while back, and I wish I’d have had some of your ideas to help me along.

    Good work!

  4. admin says:

    would you like some 3 way link exchange?

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