SUUNTO 9 Peak & Peak Pro: orologio GPS premium per corsa, ciclismo e avventura con navigazione del percorso, touch screen compatto da 43 mm, durata della batteria GPS fino a 170 ore Peak Pro Titanium Slate

Brand:SUUNTO

3.3/5

794.88

SUUNTO APP – Ti consente di creare allenamenti strutturati, obiettivi e ottenere indicazioni in tempo reale sul tuo orologio. Segui i tuoi progressi, registra le tue attività, analizza i tuoi allenamenti, il sonno e il recupero e connettiti con Strava, Training Peaks o altre 200 app per il fitness. CARATTERISTICHE - 97 modalità sport, puoi scegliere il tuo sport, la superficie di allenamento e la navigazione passo dopo passo. Gli avvisi meteo e le mappe delle valanghe offrono ulteriore tranquillità. Collega il telefono e gli auricolari ai controlli musicali al polso. Personalizza il quadrante dell'orologio tramite l'app Suunto. DURATA - Fondata nel 1936, Suunto porta oltre 80 anni di tradizione e maestria artigianale di alta qualità. Realizzato a mano in Finlandia con il 100% di energia rinnovabile, la durabilità di livello militare presenta titanio, acciaio inossidabile e vetro zaffiro, impermeabile fino a 100 m. PRECISIONE GPS: utilizza 4 diversi sistemi satellitari per una connettività rapida e un tracciamento eccezionale anche quando ti trovi tra edifici alti, terreni montuosi e ripidi canyon. SUUNTO 9 Peak PRO - progettato per gli atleti, gli sforzi e le avventure più esigenti. Si ricarica completamente in un'ora e fornisce 40 ore di batteria nella migliore modalità GPS, 70 ore in modalità resistenza e 300 ore in modalità tour. Una ricarica rapida di 10 minuti fornirà 2 ore di addestramento GPS.

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SUUNTO APP – Ti consente di creare allenamenti strutturati, obiettivi e ottenere indicazioni in tempo reale sul tuo orologio. Segui i tuoi progressi, registra le tue attività, analizza i tuoi allenamenti, il sonno e il recupero e connettiti con Strava, Training Peaks o altre 200 app per il fitness. CARATTERISTICHE - 97 modalità sport, puoi scegliere il tuo sport, la superficie di allenamento e la navigazione passo dopo passo. Gli avvisi meteo e le mappe delle valanghe offrono ulteriore tranquillità. Collega il telefono e gli auricolari ai controlli musicali al polso. Personalizza il quadrante dell'orologio tramite l'app Suunto. DURATA - Fondata nel 1936, Suunto porta oltre 80 anni di tradizione e maestria artigianale di alta qualità. Realizzato a mano in Finlandia con il 100% di energia rinnovabile, la durabilità di livello militare presenta titanio, acciaio inossidabile e vetro zaffiro, impermeabile fino a 100 m. PRECISIONE GPS: utilizza 4 diversi sistemi satellitari per una connettività rapida e un tracciamento eccezionale anche quando ti trovi tra edifici alti, terreni montuosi e ripidi canyon. SUUNTO 9 Peak PRO - progettato per gli atleti, gli sforzi e le avventure più esigenti. Si ricarica completamente in un'ora e fornisce 40 ore di batteria nella migliore modalità GPS, 70 ore in modalità resistenza e 300 ore in modalità tour. Una ricarica rapida di 10 minuti fornirà 2 ore di addestramento GPS.
Battery Life 1 Hours
Brand SUUNTO
Brand Name ‎SUUNTO
Color Slate
Color ‎Slate
Customer Reviews 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 288 ratings 4.2 out of 5 stars
Included Components Suunto 9 Peak Pro, battery, charging cord
Included Components ‎Suunto 9 Peak Pro, battery, charging cord
Item Dimensions LxWxH ‎6.89 x 1.69 x 0.42 inches
Item Package Dimensions L x W x H ‎3.54 x 3.54 x 3.43 inches
Item Weight ‎0.06 Kilograms
Manufacturer ‎SUUNTO
Map Type Worldwide
Material ‎Stainless Steel, Sapphire Crystal
Model Name 9 Peak Pro
Model Name ‎9 Peak Pro
Model Year ‎2022
Mounting Type Wrist Mount
Number of Items ‎1
Package Weight ‎0.25 Kilograms
Part Number ‎Suunto 9 Peak Pro
Screen Size 1.7 Inches
Size ‎PRO
Special Feature Touchscreen, Waterproof
Sport Type Training
Sport Type ‎Training
Style ‎Peak Pro Titanium
Suggested Users ‎Unisex-Adult
Warranty Description ‎2 year manufacturer

3.3

13 Review
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3 Star
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Scritto da: Laurence H. Mitthauer JR
GPS stopped working after a year
GPS does not work or connects. Even with assisted GPS on with latest locational update. Reset the watch multiple times with no luck. Suunto support is horrible. I’ve always owned or had Suunto watches from the Core, X-lander, and Spartan and they are all good watches. Unfortunate that the most expensive watch on their line is the worst. !UPDATE! So I ended up using the online customer service instead of the chat in which I was able to send my watch back and have it replaced. Plus they added 3 more months of warranty. This type of service bumps up the rating.
Scritto da: Rob
Sleek looking outdoors Gps watch
Nice Improvement over the 9 peak, battery life, UI looks nice but theres still some glitches in the software. Suunto will probably fix in the next software update. Also Would love to see maps!!!
Scritto da: Mo
Amazing - Suunto is back!
I haven't been impressed with Suunto in recent years but the 9 peak pro is truly amazing. Battery life has been absolutely amazing even using GPS. The android integration was seamless, notifications work perfectly coming from the phone, and love the details given in the suunto app. Some may complain about screen resolution and contrast but for me it's all about function and battery life and this watch doesn't disappoint. The watch is the most comfortable watch I've owned and the watch is crazy light weight. If you're focus is function, you won't be disappointed, the watch looks like a work of art, but if you are After the best graphics, look to samsung or Apple, but you'll sacrifice battery life, function, and quality. Menu system is also very easy and intuitive. It's smaller than most other comparable smart watches which is a plus for me and would work for women seeking a smaller profile
Scritto da: mat a.
It does watch things
No true weather unless in a exercise, have to leave the watch off the wrist for a while for the temps to be true otherwise its reading off your body temp. Id honestly just buy a garmin
Scritto da: A. R. Brown
The cost!
I'm a Suunto guy... the 9 Peak is my third one since 1998? My Suunto Core continues to work, except for the band which has been changed 10+ times maybe? This watch is NOT evolutionary it is a revolutionary step beyond my "beloved" Core. Why the change ... the bands were not good. And Peak 9 has "way" more tools packed in a light watch which you can sleep with. Many exercises but NOT golf???? but since this review is based on three weeks of use I'm continuing to search its secrets. My cycling intel is great, with speed and distance, the walking tool provides good intel also. The sleep, bpm, and ambient temp., alt, do not SEEM to be great at this point. I hope to make these functions work to my satisfaction.
Scritto da: submarine
Kind of ok, but barely
Used this watch for a year before writing a review. First off, it's smaller than the normal size Suunto watches (e.g. spartan ultra), and that unfortunately results in a substantial reduction in battery life - it is about 1/3 to 1/4 of the normal large size watch. You can barely get 5 days out of this battery after a year. It used to get about 8 days new. Compared to the larger watches, the display of this watch is really round (no notch at the 6 o'clock position), but unfortunately the resolution is lower and the software isn't really well adapted - e.g. reading notifications is considerably harder as Suunto kept the icon size the same and text is only in the lower half of the display. The display is also a fingerprint magnet, but fairly easy to read. The new watch face introduced with the 9 renders properly both in standby and in active mode on this watch (in contrast with the big one on which is horrible). Colors are still limited and for example you won't get the yellow color used in all marketing materials. Also the bezel around the display is ridiculously large for something from 2021. The leash while on the shorter side has a space saving locking mechanism with a socket and pin that seems to be adequate and the material is nice. Sleep detection is somewhat inaccurate, some days up to a couple of hours and complete lack of detecting/tracking naps. O2 saturation detection is complete and utter joke. It is broken - it works once in a blue moon, like literary I have it set up to do constant during sleep but when I go to see it, the reading is often over 20 days old. Trying to trigger it manually is unreliable, as there is no interaction - it's up to the watch to show you an old inconsistent reading or try to obtain a new one and fail. Even when it somehow manages to get the O2 reading, it would be disturbingly low - often in high 80s, while other watches and medical devices would read 97-99 at the same time. The resource measurement is also inaccurate - you remove the watch and put it back on after a minute and somehow you have "gained" 15-20% of resources. You also don't get to see the details of why the watch decides what your current resource level is. On iPhones the Suunto app won't sync your heart rate data with the health app. The sports features work adequately and well most of the time, and the watch is quick to get a fix if it was recently synced, but if not, getting a fix can take more than 30 minutes, even when both gps and glonas have been enabled. Compass works well but it's harder to see on the smaller screen (mostly due to how large the bezel is). Navigation on the current track could have also benefited from a slightly narrower bezel. The interface and accessing different features is very easy to use. There is only one function overload which is the long press of the center button and you get a great visual feedback for that. Something that Suunto has broken on this watch is the ability to select time zone by name - you only have the time zone offsets, and while it has gps, it can't sync the time with the gps or figure out the time zone automatically. For the price of this watch, I wish it worked a little better, especially with sleep and o2 and had better battery life. Correcting the other minor annoyances would have been good as well.
Scritto da: Tmo Fan
Great watch for the athletes
It may need a lot of little tweaks but overall great watch.
Scritto da: ACDC USA
Yes, sleek; yes looks solid BUT
I really, really wanted to like this watch, it looked great and solid piece of smartwatch but once I powered it up I noticed a few things right within the few minutes of trying to set it up, my very first impression was, "Wow, for a $600 smartwatch it's awfully slow scrolling through the menus, settings etc.. secondly I noticed the screen was not edge-to-edge, it had a black ring on the edges making the screen viewing smaller and I was expecting sharper images and vivid colors, but no. I also think it came as an open box as if someone else did the same thing, didnt like it and returned it to Amazon and it ended up being shipped to me, it didnt have that right-out-of-box brand new feeling. The watch is heavy, feels tough but honestly I also thought it was clunky in design. Would I pay $600 for it? NO. Would I pay $60 for it? Maybe, at best.
Scritto da: Kmerk
Great watch! Tracks everything!
Bought this for my husband and he loves it! The app has great defaced charts making it easy to understand and increase fitness
Scritto da: Dav
Génial
Tres bonne montre Livraison dans les delais Aucun problème
Scritto da: Park Soyoung
Decent sports watch but need to improve...
Great watch but short battery life. If you use 3 or 4hours for work out, have to charge everyday…
Scritto da: bob
light, comfortable, reliable, easy to use
Originally bought Fenix-7 garbage, so returned that and got Suunto instead. Great battery. The OOTB strap tends to come undone sometimes, so worried its gonna fall off during activity - so 1 star off for the insecure strap fastener. Could do with better charging indicator and screen off options during activity and some better watch faces. some good nav features like trackback and breadcrumb. have used a dozen times for around 10 hour activities. touch screen unnecessary IMHO. very happy after having a couple of Garbage Garmins.
Scritto da: Matthew J MacKay
Old school, but not past its prime for the right type of runner.
Overview Here’s my review based on a few weeks of running with the Suunto Peak 9. Because my needs and wants are different from yours, I will start with a brief description of what is important to me. Your mileage may vary! :-) To avoid confusion between the new Peak 9 and the previous 9, I will refer to the new model as the Peak, and the previous model as the 9. I’m 67 and have been running for over forty years and average 75 miles a week. I run marathons and ultras, but do not do triathlons, so I cannot evaluate the Peak 9 as a tri-watch. I do not listen to music or carry a phone when I run, so the Smartwatch features are not important to me. (I did test these, as noted below.) I don’t track sleep or recovery. I’ve been around long enough to know when I didn’t sleep well or have been overdoing my training. :-) I upgraded to the Peak 9 from a Suunto Peak. My other current running watches are the Coros Pace 2 and the Fenix 5X. The Peak is a considerable upgrade from the 9. Lighter, smaller and with a sharper screen. I have skinny antenna wrists, and the Peak doesn’t look ridiculous on my arm like the 9 did. And the Peak does not snag on jackets. Aesthetics; The Peak is a beautiful watch. If Apple designed a sport watch, it would look like this. The buttons have a satisfying click, and the unit seems solid and well built. Controls; The Peak has both buttons and a touch screen. Personally, I do not like touch screens as I find them finicky and not as sharp and bright as a regular screen. Buttons always work, regardless of how many pairs of mitts you have on. That said, the touch screen works, but don’t expect a responsive touch screen like an iphone. And, unlike the 9, the Peak can be turned off. Why Suunto designed the 9 without an on/off switch is beyond me. Watch Interface; The interface is easy to understand and is logical. A few runs, and you will control the watch instinctively. I did notice a slight sluggishness going from screen to screen. My Fenix 5X and Coros were much snappier. This did not bother me-it is microseconds-but did take a few runs to get used to. Ecosystem; Suunto has dropped their web portal and all data and watch management must be done via their phone app. It is a well-designed app, and clean and simple to use, though this is sometimes at the expense of being able to drill into the data as you can on the Garmin and Coros web apps. (The newish Coros web portal is still a bit rough around the edges but is constantly improving.) External Sensors; The 9 is easily integrated with my chest strap and my Stryd footpad. Heart rate sensor; I cannot speak to this, as I have always had issues with wrist-based heart rate, and wear a chest strap. I am very skinny and boney and wonder if I cannot get a good fit. Reviews by others say the Peak has an acceptable reading. Screen; As mentioned above, I found the screen not as bright as a non-touchscreen watch. Granted, the glass is sapphire, which does tend to be duller than traditional glass. But, being clumsy, I’ll happily trade some brightness for durability. Another issue I assume Suunto will address in a future update is the typography. (I’m an OCD book designer fixated on legibility) Granted, my eyes are 67 years old, but I do have 20/20 vision, and I found the use of a thin narrow font on the watch face challenging to read especially when I filled the screen with metrics. The screen is easier to read on my Coros, which is a sub $300 watch. The picture also shows just how large the bezel is on the Suunto-that is a whack of wasted real estate. Battery; I’m training for an ultra, and the long battery life of the Peak is essential to me. Setting battery usage is effortless and does not require deep dives into the system. Smartwatch features: I tested the music control features and notifications with my iPhone XS Max. (Now you see why I don’t run with a phone-beast weighs a ton.) Everything worked as it should. Alerts; The Peak has the option of vibration and sound alerts. The vibration is nice and buzzy, and easily felt. On the other hand, the sound is quite soft, and I often could not hear it in the wind. (I live on the North shore of PEI, and there is always wind.) I realize that the more water-resistant a watch is, the more muffled the beeper is, but I would sacrifice water resistance for a louder beep. If I ever find myself 100 meters underwater out on a run, I will have other things to worry about than water getting into my watch. :-0 ) The Charger; The revised charger unit is a vast improvement—solid connection and almost impossible to screw up. Integration: I use Training Peaks, and the Peak connected seamlessly. I do not use Strava, but I assume that would work as well, as it is a far more popular app than Training Peaks. Snap to route; This was a major factor in my buying the watch. This allows for a more accurate distance and mileage read-out, especially in a city marathon or in rural areas where the satellite signal is often compromised. While I pace by power, it is comforting to know your GPS is spot on. This is not a feature I regularly use, just for races. (I think it would have been more accurate-and cooler sounding-to call it Race Snap.) Should you buy this watch? While only you can know if the Peak is worth your hard-earned $700+, I think it is a good choice for the right person. If you run long distances, the battery management is well worth it. And it is the best looking sports watch I’ve ever owned. While almost twice as heavy as my Coros Pace 2 (a plastic watch), it is quite wearable on a daily basis. My only disappointments is the screen typography, but I think a firmware update will address those. Hope that helps, and see you pounding the pavement!

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