Hi,I was wondering if anyone could give me some suggestion on heart rate monitors. I am currently training for my first marathon - and want to keep track of distances as well as how hard I am working. I have no experience of heart rate monitors
I want a heart rate monitor and I am not sure which to get please suggest. I specifically want it to record calorie expendidture as my inital priority is fat loss. i like the suunto t6c, has a good pc set up but i know others who lov eth epolar. See
Hi, I'm a fairly new runner and am running purely to build and maintain fitness and I'm looking to buy a heart rate monitor for under £50. Do i need a watch and strap or will a watch suffice? I am hoping to be pointed in the right direction for a
Nike range. Can recommend Polar - pukka bits of kit KanMan - It looks and feels good but it doesn't record your average heart rate as a figure (it has a graph display of your heart rate over the session). I took mine back and have now bought a Polar M51
Getty ImagesThe conundrum: push yourself too hard and run yourself into the ground. Don’t push yourself hard enough and never improve. The answer: start listening to your heart, not your head, by using a heart rate monitor (HRM). What does a HRM do
someone could clean up by inventing a sports bra that incorporates a heart-rate monitor... I'm a 38A so reasonably similar to yourself. I wear compression type lycra pull-on bra tops, not ones with clips and catches that need done up, and I find that most
I was given a Heart rate monitor for my birthday, but get extremely frustrated when trying to use it. The monitor band for around the chest keeps falling down. I have tried several other methods to keeping it in the right position including safety
When Runner's World readers were asked to list their essential kit last year, heart-rate monitors came out on top. Unfortunately for the female runner, using a heart-rate monitor is usually an uncomfortable experience, requiring 10 minutes before
Gone are the days when runners would rate our efforts based on the colour of their cheeks after a run. Heart-rate monitors are now so easy to use, affordable and accurate that there's no excuse for skipping the science bit in your training. Most
I have a Polar RS400, and the band just broke for the second time. Is there a good but tough heart rate monitor watch?