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10 comments
I have the deluxe HRM that came with my Garmin Edge 500 and it appears to be quite accurate with none of the highs and lows you describe. It is true you need to wet it (or use an electrolyte cream as stated above). As for positioning I have the strap around the bottom of my ribcage with the sensor in the centre just below the bottom of my sternum. Hopefully this helps. The data readings you are getting are hopefully a glitch and not a serious health issue but it might be worth speaking to your doctor just to be on the safe side
This is a common complaint, and varies from person to person, as your skin ultimately determines the performance of the strap. If it bothers you there are various electrode creams you can buy to improve the accuracy, but it hardly seems worth it unless you have very, very dry skin.
I used my Garmin HRM yesterday at the gym and compared it to the one on the bike. I was never further than about 5bpm out and usually within that. Far as I'm concerned, that's probably in the noise and nothing to be overly worried about.
The first HRM I had was from Aldi and regularly recorded maximums in excess of 210 bpm. As I was 65 years old at the time this was a worry!
Thanks all. I usually position it just under my nipples, is that right?
I changed the battery recently, I'd seen it stop registering my HR so knew it was that.
Interesting there is no reference to the strangely low reading after starting out from everyone else, maybe it's something my heart does?
Under the moobs. Don't forget to wet the contacts or it'll be inaccurate until you start sweating
The HR strap doesn't always work as well as it might.
The older Garmin HRMs can be very unreliable. The newer one I got with my FR620 has been faultless both running and used with my Edge 800.
I've found that this makes a lot of sense.
http://www.dcrainmaker.com/2010/04/troubleshooting-your-heart-rate.html
If you got round RideLondon in 4mins 18s then I think you should expect a high pulse

But seriously....
I have read any number of posts (mainly on running forums) about weird pulse rates on various makes of pulse meter. A lot are Garmin based, but Garmin is a popular make...
On my Garmin 301 when the battery in the strap 'goes' it just stops reading the pulse. However I have noticed that when my 310 (Ant+) strap 'goes' the pulse seems to read higher than I would expect. Try changing the battery?
I do not think that the heart rate meter in a Garmin is sophisticated enough to diagnose a heart problem! See your Dr if you are concerned, if your weird pulse rate is accompanied with symptoms, chest pain, dizziness, a 'fluttering' feeling in the chest etc consider 999!
The problem being of course that if you are worried about your pulse reading then you will probably get chest pain, dizziness, a 'fluttering' feeling in the chest etc just worrying about it
Your Dr is the person to talk to, an ECG is an easy procedure along with a discussion on various risk factors if you are concerned. Let me/us know how you get on.