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24 Reviews
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63 of 68 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
looks good but doesnt work as great,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Mark of Fitness MF-180 Exercise/Heart Rate Monitor (Health and Beauty)
the monitor looks really cool on the hand while cycling or at the gym... however due to its design, it does not provide accurate readings. the finger has to be in a specific position with the sensor and that too without movement if it has to be anywhere close to accurate. I'm going to stick with the chest strap for accurate readings.
29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What a relief to find a monitor that works!,
This review is from: Mark of Fitness MF-180 Exercise/Heart Rate Monitor (Health and Beauty)
I've tried several monitors over the years....including one that attached to the ear lobe and a chest strap. Neither of these worked at all well. I've had the Mark of Fitness for close to a year and it is great! When I first got it I had probs with it sticking to a constant pulse reading...even changed batteries, but then I read their manual and they indicated that the censor should be on a clear patch of skin. My clearest spot wasn't at the direct bottom of my finger but a bit off to the side. Every since then, it's been great! It's not 100%...you have to have the proper tightness on the velcro strap.....but it's easy to adjust. By the way....I do aerobics walking as well as use an excercise bicyle.
22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Works well but controls are a bit cumbersome,
By
This review is from: Mark of Fitness MF-180 Exercise/Heart Rate Monitor (Health and Beauty)
After reading other reviews, I'm wondering if the manufacturer has improved their sensor because I almost always get a good reading and it is very close to or exactly the same as other heart monitors I compare it with around the gym (the kind on the machines where you have to grab 2 electrodes). I've had it now for about 3 months and I'm pretty happy with it. The only time I don't get a good reading is when I haven't positioned the sensor properly. The trick is that you have to have the sensor over one of the arteries in your index finger, which is off center, NOT in the middle. You also don't want it too tight -- certainly less tight than the manual says. Just make it snug and you should get a good reading. I use the "cross-country skiing" orbital trainer machine most often and it works perfectly with those kind of movements. The only time I've seen it get confused is if you intentionally wildly swing your hand around to try to confuse it. That kind of movement never happens during workouts, though, so the criticisms about it being inaccurate unless you're not moving are not the case at all in my experience. I would have to assume that the user didn't have the sensor positioned correctly. I've been quite active with it and it has always kept up just fine. I also haven't had to have a perfectly straight finger to get a good reading. Just don't try to get a reading while you're grabbing a chinup bar or curling or anything like that. You shouldn't be looking at your heart rate while lifting weights anyway, you should be paying attention to what you're doing.
I do think they could improve the glove, but it fits my hand pretty well. I'm a male with a medium-sized hand. Someone with a large hand would probably find the glove uncomfortable, and someone with a small hand would probably find it just fine. It just seems like cheap material next to the rather well-made readout and sensor. I felt that the controls were cumbersome because, as someone only interested in cardio workouts (which is the reason to have a heart monitor in the first place), the modes I need to use are several clicks away from each other. If you want to monitor recovery time, you have to click the top button 4 times to cycle through a bunch of other modes before you get from heart monitoring, to recovery time values. Definitely could have been better thought out, but all the necessary things are there, and even some fancy things I haven't taken the time to learn yet. The big advantage is, of course, that you don't have to wear a chest strap which I have found extremely appealing. I would have given 5 stars if they would have made a better glove and would have thought out the sequence of functions with the buttons more realistically. All things considered, though, knowing what I know now, I would still buy it over any other monitor.
28 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
tri prep,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Mark of Fitness MF-180 Exercise/Heart Rate Monitor (Health and Beauty)
I really do love this item. I've been using it without fail since the day it arrived. I haven't had any significant problems with it and highly recommend it for anyone. I hated wearing the chest strap on my other monitor.
The only problem I have found is that I can't grip things and have the monitor continue working. So when I am lifting weights I have to leave that finger extended, when I'm using the eliptical trainer I have to leave that finger extended. Now that I'm used it, it isn't a big deal. It is accurate. So far it has agreed with all other monitors that I've checked it against. So with the one minor exception I highly recommend it.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Inconsistently accurate, with occasional spurious readings and some wear discomfort.,,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Mark of Fitness MF-180 Exercise/Heart Rate Monitor (Health and Beauty)
This unit was purchased with the hope that it would give continuous and reliable readings. It often does, but inaccuracies are not uncommon; e.g., when removed it sometimes continues to report a heart rate, and during use it occasionally reports erroneously higher readings, compared to baton and direct pulse measurements.
Others with different hand and blood vessel geometry may obtain different results, but with the anatomical dimensions of my hand I found the unit too inaccurate to consistently rely on. Wearing the unit is not without comfort issues for me. The velcro fastening material is placed along the full width of the finger mount. This results in the unit sometimes becoming uncomfortable to wear. Also, the width of the finger mount means the index finger cannot be easily flexed when the unit is worn. Although settings are not intuitive, the instruction manual is clearly written, and the unit provides a number of useful additional functions, i.e., clock, alarm, stopwatch, under and over heart rate alarms, and calories burned. However, my primary aim was to get a consistently accurate heart rate monitor. For that purpose, this unit has proved less than fully satisfactory.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What a Great Tool for Anyone Trying to Lose Weight,
By Barb "Book Lover in Lemont" (Lemont, IL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mark of Fitness MF-180 Exercise/Heart Rate Monitor (Health and Beauty)
I really love my Mark of Fitness MF-180 Exercise/Heart Rate Monitor. I really use it to keep track of the calories that I burn during my workouts. Plus it lets me know when I'm out of my set target zone.
I would recommend this for anyone that is trying to lose weight. I did have a problem with the first monitor I got not being able to get a reading but I contacted Amazon.com and they sent me another one without questions and I sent the defective one back.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent for what it does.,
By LaughingVulcan "LV" (Bloomington, IL. United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mark of Fitness MF-180 Exercise/Heart Rate Monitor (Health and Beauty)
My review is based on 6 weeks of ownership. I asked for this for my birthday, and my wife got it for me. I am very pleased with it!
It is very accurate for sports activities which do *not* require the use of the hand you've got it wrapped on. In the past six weeks I have used it for the following activities: walking, running, solo racquetball practice, treadmill, stationary recumbent exercise bike, solo basketball practice. I haven't used it with boxing or swimming. ;) Only during the basketball practice does it have a problem with keeping accurate measurements (because shooting with both hands disturbs the sensor on your index finger.) It's got a green LED and sensor in the same module, similar to a hospital-style fingertip monitor. I have checked it by getting my pulse to a certain level, stopping my exercise, and counting my pulse manually and comparing. I have also used the momentary pulse grips on treadmills, and it's always withing 2 beats of that display (and I think the MF-180 is the more accurate measurement.) Best features: While you've got the pulse meter turned on, you've got constant access to your pulse rate throughout the exercising. No nasty chest strap. No holding two fingers on the face of it, either. It even displays your pulse rate in "stopwatch" mode, though at a slower refresh rate than just pulse display alone. Plus it's got "zone" settings - you can target what pulse range you want to exercise at. So, why 4 and not 5 stars? Only three reasons: * My model did not have the little gray grommet on the strap buckle (as shown in the photo.) * The straps that attach the reading unit to the "glove" are OK, but a little too short. (When strapping it on it has come loose a couple of times, then straps down just fine again.) * The design would have been *much* helped by the addition of a separate "reset" key. It's easy enough to learn how to use, but there is a learning curve, mainly because of this. Overall, I've been *very* satisfied with this product. I'd heartily recommend it to anyone who hates chest straps and so forth but wants a constant pulse readout. I hope to use it for years to come. Tips on using: * Keep in mind the "select" button is also the "reset" button if you hold it long enough / too long. * The sensor has to be on the meat of the finger. I find keeping it just off-center towards the thumb is best.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Comfortable to use,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
I've only recently started using this product to monitor my heart rate and am still in the learning process of how to use the produce efficiently. It has so many things that it can keep track of. I find it to be rather comfortable to use. It monitors my heart rate in % which helps me to stay within my range. I would recommend this product to anyone who is looking to get away from those chest strap monitors.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
limited usefulness,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Mark of Fitness MF-180 Exercise/Heart Rate Monitor (Health and Beauty)
This will require a large mitten in colder weather.
This does not appear to use electrical impulse. This will require more adapting to than you might think. When working, it is accurate.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
No more nasty chest strap for me,
By tigerhawk (Iowa) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Mark of Fitness MF-180 Exercise/Heart Rate Monitor (Health and Beauty)
I love this monitor. I wore a Polar chest strap for several years. Although I liked the information I got from the Polar, I absolutely HATED the sweaty, sticky, nasty, uncomfortable chest strap - as a female, it never fit me just right. Bought this monitor in late January and it has worked great since day 1. Heart rate and calorie counts seems very consistent with readings I got with my Polar. Yes, you do have to keep the index finger relatively straight, but I've had no trouble on the elliptical, the treadmill, or even the weight machines. I've also had no trouble getting the finger sensor positioned correctly (I do have relatively small hands). Mostly however, it is COMFORTABLE which means I'm more likely to use it regularly. The only feature I miss from my Polar was the ability to have an average heart rate at the end of a workout. This unit doesn't do that, but it has enough other advantages for me that I give it 5 stars.
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Mark of Fitness MF-180 Exercise/Heart Rate Monitor by Mark of Fitness
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