I just made a $400 investment in running gear. No, my iPod didn’t get caught in the rain again, but I was compelled to buy a GPS watch. Not wanting to go the cheap route I purchased a top of the line Garmin 405CX complete with heart rate monitor.
The watch keeps track of pace, elevation, heart rate, distance traveled, direction traveled, calories burned, and more. After returning from runs I just go within a few feet of my computer and the watch automatically sends the data to my computer and it appears on the Internet without me having to do much of anything.
The Web site stores all this information with a Google map of where I went and how fast I was going. And all of this is kept track of in a calendar with my runs able to be seen by the world.
The reason I made the purchase was simple: I wanted to know if it could make me faster. After a month of ownership I’d say it has made me run smarter and train harder, and hopefully this has made me faster.
Here’s how I think it’s made me faster.
Pace
One of the simple training features has become one of the most effective. I can set a pace that I want to run, say 7 minutes/mile, and the watch creates a virtual training partner and keeps track of how far ahead or behind I am from the digital man. It is surprisingly satisfying to beat the man in the watch, and this gives me extra motivation to finish runs hard rather than taking it easy.
Distance
Gone are the days where a 10 mile run is anywhere between 8 and 12 miles. Now I know if I ran 5.99 miles or 9.71 miles. While this might sound trivial, runners have a tendency to exaggerate mileage in our heads and what we say to others. Knowing how far we’ve gone makes us want to go farther.
Racing
I’ve never trusted mile splits during races. Sometimes the markers are set up at the wrong locations and sometimes you’re not running the pace you see. For example, if you go by mile markers and you run your first mile in 5 minutes and 30 seconds, that doesn’t mean that you are currently running 5:30 miles. You could have run fast at the start and then slowed. So now you think you’re running 5:30 miles when you’re actually running a 6-minute pace. With the watch you get accurate readings throughout the race, helping you pace better.
Also, advertised race distances are shorter than how far you raced. If you race a 5k you might see that you ran a 5.1k. This is because the race is measured as the shortest possible distance, taking bad lines will increase the distance. Seeing this extra distance will encourage you to take better lines and take a few minutes
Minor complaints
Calories: Since I’ve never counted calories this was bound to be a useless feature for me, but for those that do the watch keeps track of it. Just as you can do with distance, you can set goals for total calories burned each day, week or month.
Water resistance: The touch bezel that you control the watch with is similar to an iPod. However, if you sweat a lot or expose the watch to rain it is hard to operate. The watch lets you display three items at once, such as time, pace and distance. If you don’t need to switch back and forth you can lock the bezel and there aren’t any moisture problems.
Heart rate monitor: Maybe I’m not smart enough to make sense of it but seeing a heart rate correspond with how fast I’m running doesn’t help me. If I run faster, my heart rate goes up, but I would much rather train at a certain pace – say 6:30 miles – rather than at a certain heart rate.
Battery life: It’s advertised as 8 hours when using the GPS so it’ll never be a problem during runs. However, the watch warned me that the battery was about to die during a six hour bike ride on the Blue Ridge Parkway. It made it the whole way, but I didn’t want to lose all that data.
WANT TO KNOW MORE?
Go online and check out Ben Patton’s running stats. Visit http://connect.garmin.com/explore?owner=cameraman117