Tag Archives: Heart Rate Monitor

Omron HR-100C Heart Rate Monitor

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Omron HR-100C Heart Rate Monitor

List Price: $59.99 Publisher: Omron
Salesrank: 23
Released: 2005-07-01
Our Price: $32.49
Availibility: 1
Costumer Rating:

Features:

  • Heart rate monitor is easy to program
  • Comfortable to wear with ventilated watch band
  • Helps maintain a proper heart rate with a high/low heart rate alarm
  • Chest transmitter belt sends data to the receiver at a distance of up to 98 feet (30 meters)
  • Built with a backlight function, time of day display, and daily reminder alarm

    Customer Reviews:
    OK at best
    The heart rate loses its signal allot and also acts erratic with huge swings in beats per minute.

    Great Product
    Product is great! Exactly what I was looking for, and because I bought it on Amazon, it was less expensive!!! AAA++++

    Good quality at a good price.
    I own an Omron blood pressure monitor and an Omron pedometer in addition to the HR-100C heart rate monitor and I find all three to be good quality products. I use the heart rate monitor when I exercise on an exercycle (the monitor that came with the Schwinn exercycle stopped working years ago), and keeping an eye on it motivates me to work harder to get into a specific target zone. Using it has taught me that although I may feel that I am working out at the level I want, my heart rate doesn’t necessarily reflect that, and I actually need to be pushing harder. So the feedback the 100C gives me about what is actually happening with one aspect of my physiology versus what I may imagine is happening is most helpful to me.

    There exist some electronic devices that I am either too lazy or too dense to program, but I found the Omron 100C watch incredibly easy to set up. This may be partly due to the fact that Omron’s manuals are, in my experience, clearly written. I own some electronic products that I can’t use unless I remind myself how by referring to the manual, but the 100C is for me intuitive. If I push the wrong button when trying to get the heart monitor readout to appear, it’s not a problem, for it does not create a situation where I have to go through umpteen steps to undo something. I just press another button until I see the readout I need. The same is the case with setting the alarm and turning it on and off. It’s simple and intuitive enough that I don’t need to consult the instruction manual.

    I do find the watch’s light a tad feint, but it’s bright enough to see in dim light or the dark and that’s all that matters, and maybe it was designed to be dim to conserve battery power. The rubber accessory that comes with the 100C that allows the user to put the watch on the handlebars of a bike, etc., is very convenient and sturdy.

    I compared the heart rate reading I got on the 100C matched against the heart rate reading I got on my Omron blood pressure monitor (which is model HEM-780) by wearing each at the same time and the readings I got differed by two beats (one was 75 and the other 77 as I recall). That is close enough to be of no concern to me. I’ve owned and regularly used the 100C for nearly a month, and I’ve had no problems with it. I consider Omron a trustworthy name and I am pleased with their products, and I am pleased with the HR-100C and recommend it to anyone who wants a fairly inexpensive heart rate monitor made by a reliable manufacturer.

    Cheap and functional
    Works well, seems quite durable too.

    You have to get a snug fit around your chest, but unlike the manual advises it was not necessary for me to lube up the contact points with liquid (thank God, that would be awkward).

    I’ve used it at my desk, at the gym, and it tracks pretty well with a delay of a mere one or two seconds. This item is ideal if you want the simple basics that work well and durably, without having to pay extra money for frills.

    Omron Heart Rate Monitor
    This is a great device for monitoring your heart rate during exercise. The price is great too!

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    Heart Rate Chest Belt with Radio

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    Heart Rate Chest Belt with Radio

    List Price: $100.00 Publisher: Oregon Scientific
    Salesrank: 95066
    Our Price: $52.99
    Availibility:
    Costumer Rating:

    Features:

  • Heart rate readings, workout time, calories burned, heart rate alert, set-up and instructions are outputted verbally
  • FM radio with 5 presets
  • Audio heart rate zone alert; automatic or manual heart rate target zone
  • Training Program with warm-up, exercise and recovery timer to help monitor fitness levels
  • Also features stopwatch, exercise profile, user profile, exercise timer and memory

    Customer Reviews:
    For the price, its pretty cool
    I bought this after buying my wife the Oregon Scientific wrist vibrating heart rate monitor. She is happy with hers so I figured this would be pretty cool for me. I had a heart rate monitor many years ago but it was inaccurate and hard to read. Oregon scientific has some radical ideas that make sense. The vibrating one that my wife got is cool because you don’t have to stop what you are doing to look at it. And that was my thinking with this talking version. I really wanted an MP3 player with a talking heart rate monitor, but I was too cheap to drop the $300 on a Swirl or the Yamaha one that isn’t out yet. Anyway, this thing takes a while to program and since its all voice prompts it is a little tedious. I think the heart rate monitor portion of mine was off a little bit because it said my heart rate was sitting about 175 during my long run and I run a lot. There’s no way I could actually keep my heart rate up there for over an hour but that’s what it said I did. Once I got the verbal alarm set to where it would allow me to run without continuously griping at me to slow down, it worked pretty well, for about 3 weeks anyway. Then around week three I was doing my normal run, about 8 miles, and about 5 miles into it the thing started blasting this horrendous screeching into my ears. No big deal, I thought, the batteries must be dead. Fortunately the radio still worked after I unplugged it from the chest belt. Well I changed the batteries and it would not come back on. So I sent the thing back to the seller and they sent me a replacement. Fortunately the thing died within the retailers 30 day window, otherwise I would have had to send it back to Oregon Scientific for a replacement. I haven’t had a chance to run with the second one yet so I don’t know if I’ll have problems. But again for $44 with free shipping the thing is pretty cool. My main complaint about it (other than the fact that the first one had a very short life span) is that it doesn’t use rechargeable batteries. Its not just the cost of the watch batteries that both the chest belt and the radio use, but also the damage to the environment. I’m really surprised that they haven’t found some way to use a rechargeables. The headset it really good and I hardly notice it is there. Fortunately it uses a pleasant female voice for the alerts and not some computer generated Stephen Hawking voice. Again, I wish it had mp3 instead of radio. The radio is a separate piece and I’m really surprised that they haven’t teamed up with someone to offer an mp3 version. If my next one dies I’ll probably bite the bullet and get a Swirl. That’s what I really wanted but come on, $300 and then a monthly fee? The thing should run FOR ME for that price. Hope this helps.

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