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Polar AXN700 Altimeter, Barometer, Temperature, and Compass | 
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| Brand: Polar
List Price: $449.95 Buy New: $419.95 You Save: $30.00 (7%)
Rating: 5 reviews
Color: Titanium Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 9 x 9 x 6
MPN: AXN700 Model: 90023767 UPC: 000000000000 EAN: 0725882237671 ASIN: B000F6FHL6
Promotion: Get free shipping on this item when you spend $5.00 or more on All Items offered by Heart Rate Monitors USA. Terms and Conditions Promotion: Get free shipping on this item when you spend $100.00 or more on Polar Heart Rate Monitors offered by Heart Rate Monitors USA. Enter code A6S66OFA at checkout. Terms and Conditions Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Outdoor sport heart rate monitor and watch with WearLink fabric transmitter | | • | Keep track of your runs with the Slope counter | | • | Altimeter features include altitude with graphical trend (ascent and descent), vertical speed | | • | Check your pace down the mountain or up the rock with the Vertical speed feature | | • | Track changing weather and monitor your personal energy expenditure |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description You have the courage and the desire to face the extreme, endure the toughest competitions and compete with natureï s most unforgiving forces. You need the most powerful, most personal, most dedicated tools to give you the edge. With the AXN700 we have added the heart rate rest test to determine if your body is acclimated to the extreme conditions. All wrapped up in a titanium case, the AXN700 ensures your ready for whatever nature throws at you. Comes with Polar WearLink 31 coded transmitter (changeable battery).
Amazon.com Product Description Whether you are competing against others, pushing your own limits, or fighting the elements, the Polar AXN500 altimeter/wrist heart rate monitor will help you keep track of your outdoor activities--from mountaineering to kayaking to spelunking--and keep your training goals in sight. The AXN500 takes all the features from the AXN500 and adds a compass for directional information. a WearLink fabric transmitter, heart rate rest test, and a slope counter for skiing. It also offers a sleek silver stainless steel design. This wristwatch-like monitor features a large display that includes 12/24-hour time of day, three daily alarms, and stopwatch. Heart rate tracking includes continuous heart rate with graphical trend, average/maximum rate, and one set of target zones with visual and audible alarms. The AXN500 records up to 100 exercise files with summaries, and it has an automatic logbook with 2-week circular memory. Altimeter features include altitude with graphical trend (ascent and descent), vertical speed, and cumulative ascent and descent. Barometric features include temperature, sea-level pressure with graphical trend, and barometric pressure drop alarm. Polar's heart rate rest test measures your resting heart rate to determine how well you have adapted to extreme conditions. This will provide you with information on the state of your physical fitness and recovery, or your acclimatization to altitude. The Slope Counter feature automatically records the number of slopes you cover (a course of at least 50m /165ft descended continuously is registered as a slope). Check your pace down the mountain or up the rock with the Vertical speed feature. The Polar OwnCal feature shows your energy expenditure during one exercise session as well as your accumulated kilocalories during several exercise sessions. You can set daily and weekly exercise goals in terms of calorie expenditure with the OwnCal feature. Because the OwnCal tracks both the energy expenditure during one exercise session and the accumulated kilocalories during a longer time e.g. one week, it helps in achieving both short term and long term goals. Other features include backlight for easy reading in low-light conditions, user replaceable battery, and water resistance up to 100 meters (330 feet). Manufacturer Warranty The original purchaser of this heart rate monitor is backed by a limited warranty that states that this product that the product will be free from defects in material or workmanship for two years from the date of purchase. About Polar The first EKG accurate wireless heart rate monitor was invented by Polar back in 1977 as a training tool for the Finnish National Cross Country Ski Team. The concept of "intensity training" by heart rate swept the athletic world in the eighties. By the 1990s, individuals were looking to heart rate monitors not only for performance training needs, but also for achieving everyday fitness goals. Today, the same concept of heart rate training is being used by world-class athletes as well as everyday people trying to lose weight. Polar is the leading brand among consumers, coaches, and personal trainers worldwide and the company is committed to not only producing the best products, but also being the leading educator on the benefits of heart rate based exercise.
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| Customer Reviews:
Do not buy any Polar product! May 17, 2008 Mike Call 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
I'm a gigantic idiot for buying a 2nd Polar watch, this time the AXN700, after my 1st Polar watch stopped working in less than 3 years. After chalking up my first Polar to plain bad luck I researched HRM watches and picked the AXN700. I liked the AXN700's appearance and features, and I assumed the titanium structure would mean increased durability. Not so lucky... The AXN's band is very China-like and attached to the watch by 2 tiny plastic hooks on each side. Plastic hooks that bend, break and eventually snap. It took 1y months of regular usage before it happened to me. Ugh. 0 for 2 with Polar. A side complaint about this watch is the computer would freeze up if the internal memory was close to reaching maximum capacity...so I got use to regularly transferring my workout data to my computer once a week. The infrared data transfer is pretty slick and that's what I give the watch 1 star. Another assumed benefit about the AXN700 is that it comes with a 2 year manufacture warranty. Since my watch broke in the 17th month I thought I was safe. I contacted Polar Electro Inc in the state of NY and they told me to submit a warranty claim. On the phone, I explained to the Polar rep that I bought my watch new, in a sealed box, on this site. I have the original warranty card that has my name on it. I have the original receipt. Heck, this watch didn't go into production until 2006, so my watch is maximum 2 years old. I shipped the watch to Polar at my expense for repair. Polar returned it to me 3 weeks later NOT repaired. The sent it back to me without any explanation (ugh) so I contacted Polar to find out more. I thought, this has to be a mistake - so I called...after holding on the phone for 40 minutes, I found out because my watch was purchased from an unauthorized Polar dealer, my manufacture warranty was void. Figures. Because Polar only supplies their products to authorized dealers I hoped for an explanation to how I could possibly buy a watch that wasn't transferred to me via an authorized dealer. The 3 different reps I spoke to were mentally incapable of following my line of reasoning. Figures. So, despite that I have a warranty card in my name, along with a receipt in my name proving my watch is 17 months old, I am S.O.L. So get this, apparently the manual discloses the watch must be purchased from an authorized dealer but you can't read the manual until you purchase the watch and break the box's seal. Even more, the outside of the watch's box proudly reads that the watch comes with a 2 year mfg warranty but the fine print inside the box tells a different story. Be careful when dealing with Polar products. I have filed a complaint with the Better Business Bureau of NY and the Attorney General of NY. 3 different individuals at Polar told me that all I could do is buy a replacement band on the Internet. Coincidently-not, all the replacement bands are sold out / out of stock EVERYWHERE I have looked. Geez, wonder why? I'm buying the new Garmin Forefunner 405 watch that comes out in June 2008. Crossing my fingers on Garmin...
Nice option February 5, 2008 M. Junior (Sao Paulo, Brazil) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a nice combination of fitness and aventure wrist computer unit. Yes it is bulk but it has a lot features. look for the S725x as an option if you do not use the compass. If you need a lighter watch for daily use with compass and hr go to suunto x6hr. i hope it helps.
AXN700 December 8, 2007 Andrew Gerhardt (Denver, CO) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
The watch is a mixture of Titanium and Rubber. Not very elegant, since the Titanium looks plasticky next to all the plastic (yes, Titanium can indeed look like plastic). Extremely bulky. I was amazed at how thick the watch was when I got it. It is about 1/2" thick. This product is not inconspicous. It has a lot of functions of which the altimeter and HR monitor work best. Obviously the Altimeter needs to be calibrated every time the weather changes. Says its good for skiing, but the strap cannot expand to fit over clothes or a wetsuit. Also the buckle is extremely badly designed. It is almost 2mm thick at its hinge, and the strap (even when it has some play) will push the hinge into your skin so that when the watch slides and moves the buckle will rub into your wrist and gives you a blister. Polar should have invested the Titanium on the buckle not the frame. It also has a scratch prone screen. If you think this is a HR monitor that can be worn everyday because it looks more like a watch than an HR monitor, you are mistaken. It is simply too thick. That said, there is a lot of technology packed into this wristop computer as Polar refers to it. But the interface is pretty bad and the Fonts are (of necessity) very small. I couldn't even set the time without reading the manual. You are able to record workouts and transfer them to your computer, but in this price range you are better off getting an HR that is compatible with Polar's speed and distance sensor. Ultimately this watch needs to be slimmed down, get a redesigned buckle, given a much better user interface to access all its technology, and be made usable with gloves or a wetsuit on. It also should be made compatible with all Polar's accesories. For a flagship product it kind of sinks underneath its own weight. From an aesthetic point of view, it looks way cooler in the brochure than it does in real life.
Useful item for a runner or extremist June 9, 2007 Karhapää Tarmo 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I have had my AXN700 for more than a year. I have used the unit with following ways: 1. When running, jogging or skiing I store the exercise and then load into my laptop via IR. This is an easy way to store your exercises and have an up-to-date exercise calendar. From the exercise calendar you can also see how your body reacts to a periodic exercise. After a while, you see that the same jogging trip can be done in shorter time with a lower average heart rate. Seeing is believing. I find it very motivating to see my proceeding on my lap-top screen. I have never ever been able to keep record of my exercises by traditional means Now the AXN700 does it for me. Great! 2. I have also used my AXN700 while hiking at Austrian Alps. Actually I was curious about the accuracy of the altimeter and took my Garmin GPSMAP 60 CSX with me. Last October I was very close to Kitzbuehel at mountain called Schwarzkogel, told at local maps to be 2030 meters high. I calibrated the altimer of my AXN700 at the Kitzbuehel Bergbahn station before leaving to the hike and surprise, surprise: There was a difference of 3-4 meters between the readings of these two units: Garmin GPSMAP 60 CSX and my AXN700. I was surprised about the accuracy of the AXN700. The unit itself is a bulky one, but I guess that the designers behind the design have tried to find something which looks to be used within harsh environment. And it is not even thought to be used with a white shirt and black tie... It is a nice device!
Like it - but flawed November 10, 2006 Jeffrey P. Hagen (Kailua, HI United States) 16 out of 17 found this review helpful
I like this watch, but it's hard to give it a good review. It has all the heart rate monitor functions you could hope for and the altitude, temp and compass do come in handy occasionally. However: The wrist band is poorly designed. My two-year-old was looking at the watch and broke the band in about 30 seconds (and it has a unique design which can only be repaired by sending it back to Polar). Kids are tough, but this watch is supposed to be for outdoor use and breaking so easily is unacceptable. My kid can't break my Casio G-Shock. It's very thick, such that people are asking me all the time what that thing on my wrist it. These days, you could probably fit a whole PC in the volume. It also makes the face very susceptible to scratches. The temp reading is useless on your wrist due to body temperature. Not a fault with this particular design, but it does greatly reduce the utility. Compass not really useful for navigation since there's no way to "sight" along the watch or read it while sighting. Despite large size of the display, many readouts are very small and the display can't be customized. Never was able to get it to download to my computer. I have a standard Dell laptop with IR port and neither the IR or sound connection ever worked. Why not just use a mini-USB port like everything else that connects to a computer? So basically, save your money. Buy a nice simple Polar monitor/watch ($100) for normal use and a real compass (which are $40) or GPS unit (which cost less than this watch and provide more accurate elevation) for outdoor use.
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