Garmin vivosmart 4, Fitness Tracker w/ Pulse Ox
$74.99
$129.99
42% off
Reference Price
Condition: New
Size: Large
Top positive review
145 people found this helpful
Another Great Wearable from Garmin--this one needs to learn about you, too.
By Dora on Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2019
I upgraded from the Vivosmart 3 and I am excited about most of the upgrades made in the 4. I love that we now have a button to get into the second level menu or go back to the home screen. It has a nice sleek look. It is a little narrower than the Garmin three. At first, I disliked reading the scrolling text but after a week I adjusted and it no longer bothers me. So I think the new narrow design is a plus. I had hoped I could use the Garmin 3 charging cable but the charging connection now sports an extra prong making it incompatible with the Garmin 3 charging cable. But it holds a charge much better than the 3 ever did. I only have to charge it once a week now instead of the begging and end of the week. And I use the nighttime SPo2 feature. I love the pulse ox. I've seen a lot of reviewers complain about it. Unfortunately, all of the reviews I watched or read about only used the Garmin for two or three days and at most, a few, used it for a week. This is not enough time. First, I tested the pulse ox feature against a finger pulse ox monitor. The Garmin is typically read 2% below the finger pulse ox. On a separate occasion when I was cold, it read 4% below the finger pulse ox. It shouldn't be a surprise that a wrist-based pulse Ox doesn't match the doctor's office device. However, it's within an acceptable range for me to use it. Especially, when I see I dropped down to 73 a couple of times during the night. One of the things to note is that you do need to wear this snug to the wrist for the HR and the Pulse Ox to work ideally. Many of the reviewers when they showed it, they were not wearing it snug. I can still fit my index finger between my band and wrist so it isn't tight. Another sore point in most reviews is the overnight SPo2 monitoring. This frustrated me for the first week as it has many reviewers. But after that, it worked consistently. I learned that it only runs for about the middle 4 hours of your sleep time. Now, if you are a restless sleeper and move around a lot or get up, it will stop reading. In order for it to take your Pulse Ox your wrist needs to be straight. If you bend it, it will stop reading. If you make a fast move, it will stop, if you get up, it will stop. But, once you settle again, the Vivosmart will start back up again. If your band is loose enough to slide around, you will not get a consistent pulse ox at night Especially if you move around. I also tested the Heart rate feature at the doctor's office and it was always dead on. Not once has it strayed from the doctor's reading. I tested both the pulse ox and the HR at five different doctor's offices. So I am fairly confident in the Garmin Pulse Ox and Heart Rate readings. But again, it needs to be snug to your wrist in order to achieve an accurate reading. When it is loose, it can be off. I did have to work a little to get my custom step size just right before it would take an accurate read of the distance I traveled and the number of steps I've taken during the day. For those who want to put it on and not worry about, you may or may not have an accurate measure of how far you've walked/run or the number of steps you've taken. I do feel my Vivosmart 3 was a little better there. Not sure if it's specific to my band or why it is. But I did get it to work perfectly through the custom step and matching it to a handheld GPS to confirm distance. The Body Battery is an interesting and unique feature. This one really needed time to learn me. It took a couple of weeks for this one to mesh with my life and activities. Once it did, I've found that it has been useful to make decisions on working out or not. At one point I couldn't figure out why my reading was 44 because I felt great. Well, the next day I was sick. If I had looked at the hrv and pulse ox during the day (you have to manually ask it to take the pulse ox), I would have realized I was getting sick and could have adapted my activities for the day. I certainly don't use the body battery a lot but I do find it useful. For those who like to auto-count workouts, I've enjoyed that feature quite a bit. I don't run, but I love to walk and I swim, which is why I decided on the Garmin Vivosmart 3, it was waterproof. It misses a stroke or a rep here or there but it hasn't been very often. And if you do find it missed something, you can certainly add it in the App. Yes, it really is waterproof. I use it in the pool all the time and don't worry about it in the shower. Garmin says the Vivosmart is waterproof up to 50 meters. And yes, it is! I don't normally scuba dive with it on. During the last trip, I forgot to take it off before climning into my gear. My husband was about to head below deck so I handed it to tuck it away in our bags. He dropped in his shorts pocket and well, yes, he forgot. So, this wonderful little band survived a thirty minute, 40-meter dive. It's not a dive computer and I probably won't wear it diving again because I can only handle so many wrist-based devices but I certainly won't be worried if I forget it again. So, whether you want it for the gym, running/walking, swimming, snorkeling, take it scuba diving, tracking sleep, this little wearable is an excellent choice.
Top critical review
55 people found this helpful
Small and light with great battery life, but iffy pulse ox and sleep tracking
By Prime Reviews on Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2018
The Garmin Vivosmart 4 is lighter and smaller than predecessor, but its real claim to fame is its new pulse oximeter. Unfortunately the new feature is a bit of a loser and I may have to return the Vivosmart because of it. Pulse Ox The spot check takes a full 30 seconds of stillness, and then the screen turns off after 30 seconds and won't show you the reading again if you missed it. The continuous pulse ox monitoring for sleep tracking isn't much better, because it seems to be more of a test of how much your wrist band is tightened. The readings varry widely based on fit, with no way to tell which, if any, is accurate. Sleep Tracking The fancy name for the kind of sleep tracking the Vivosmart 4 uses is "actigraphy," which is just a term for detecting sleep based on how much you move. The Garmin supposedly also uses your heart rate to attempt to differentiate between the different sleep stages, but, strangely, the phone app won't show heart rate with the sleep stages, just motion and pulse ox. I don't know how accurate the sleep stage detection is but I can say the Vivosmart 4 really isn't very good about telling if you're awake. As with other actigraphy-based sleep trackers, the Vivosmart 4 can't tell the difference between you being asleep vs lying awake but not moving. In fact the Vivosmart 4 is so stupid that even if you use the watch manually at night by pressing the screen to turn it on, the tracker doesn't automatically score you as being awake. But, that being said, it's relatively good about detecting when I fall asleep. It is crap, however, about detecting when I wake up but don't get out of bed. One nice feature about the Vivosmart 4 is that you can use the app to set your normal sleep time of night. During that time the screen will not automatically turn on when you turn your wrist, which is a problem for users of some other types of sleep trackers with lit screens. Fitness Tracking Step counting seems adequate for a wrist mounted tracker. But of course it is subject to the problem that it can't always tell when you're moving or when just your wrist is moving. Plus the automatic activities detection tends to run a bit late. As to the heart rate monitoring, I haven't put this to the test - optical HR monitors don't ever seem to be as accurate as chest mounted ones - but I can say that the peaks you see on the watch may not show up in the app. I don't know if the app rounts off peaks as outliers or what, but there's definitely missing data, maybe for a good reason, or maybe not. I don't know. Fit and Interface The medium/small fits me, barely. But the band isn't really quite long enough even though the width of the fit tracker itself fits perfectly. I find that the "watch" part of this style of tracker tends to be too wide for my wrist, so I really wanted the small/medium band to fit. I like the stretchy aspect of the band. I dislike the lack of replacebilty and fit options. Annoyingly, the Amazon listing didn't state the size, but a different all black option said "large" and I hoped the other listing was the small/medium. Fortunately that was the case. The Vivosmart 4's interface is a bit of a mess. You can't set the watch face to display both time and HR as a clock face, which seems like a stunning omission. But you can set it to show steps and time. :-/ The worst part about the interface is the fussy touch screen which doesn't always work, causing me to repeatedly stab and swipe at it like a pigeon in a Skinner box. The tracker really needs a better touch screen or a physical button. And the screen can be hard to read in full daylight. It's like we've gone back to the LED wrist watches of the 1970s. Battery life is good, though. Phone App The phone app is mostly pretty good. I wish the sleep tracker of would show heart rate superimposed over sleep stages, but you can look up the heart rate as part of the regular heart rate monitor. The app can't sync with Google fit. I'd like to keep these things synchronized. But a bigger issue than that it doesn't store the data of locally on my phone. I can't look at yesterday's steps or heart rate without connecting to the internet. This is a pain in the neck when traveling internationally and I don't always have instant access to the Internet. Also, there's no reason why the app can't use my phone's GPS when I'm carrying my phone. It's not a function of the wrist mounted fitness tracker lacking hardware or using battery up, it's a feature missing from the app. It's inexcusable that the app connect won't use my GPS to keep track of location and improve distance calculations. UPDATE 4/20/19: The watch bezel (the shiny ring of plastic around the display) fell off for no reason. I received a new replacement watch under warranty within a week of sending in the broken one. That's a pretty speedy turn around time and I'm happy the process was fast and easy.
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