![]() ![]() I use Strava for the social aspect (I also pay for premium), and the other services are only data conduits to the others. It’s a nightmare setting it all up, but I use Today’s Plan as my central dashboard for everything training related. Then I have my Withings Smart Scales, which sends data via Under Armour MapMyFitness to both Zwift and Today’s Plan (so in Zwift, my weight is always correct). ![]() Zwift (trainer) sends to Strava and Today’s Plan, and FulGaz is supposed to do that but only syncs to Strava for me at the moment.Īt the gym we have Stages SC3 spin bikes, and data from those comes into Suunto Movescount, which in turn comes into Strava and Today’s Pkan. My outdoor activities go from my Garmin GPS to Garmin Connect, which then sends to Today’s Plan, Strava and RideWithGPS. I have stuff going all over the place, it’s hard to keep up. ![]() it is a bit chunky and not as elegant as the others but still gives you a lot of access. Apart from TrainingPeaks and TodaysPlan (and others like Xert) there is an opensource one called Golden Cheetah. If you don't need live data, you Garmin watch and Garmin Connect can record the data and let you view it.įor more detailed access to the data (download or sync the Fit file or CSV) then an analytical/training application can be used. The Rest There are a number of players but producing a well rounded unit like Garmin and Wahoo is tough. Stages cycle computers was not their strong suitĬateye a classic name and they try but are not really there SRM an option, but not as integrated and developed so hard to keep up Polar also left the building, essentially neglecting cycling Magellan have (essentially) left the building, nicely made but limitations in functionality Hammerhead Karoo is still one of the new kids, promising Wahoo are a nice alternative - elegant, a nice interface and integration but price could be a concernīryton is fairly cheap but can be limited with features and a clunky interface. Garmin are a standard for sports but can be pricey It doesn't chew up power like a smart phone (when the screen is always on) and tend to offer more features and connectability. If you are interested in these, a cycle computer will make sense. However it will depend on your actual needs.ĭo you want data (speed, HR, cadence, duration, etc) while riding? I agree, Garmin Connect is the easy solution as it is there. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |