🏃♂️ Elevate Your Fitness Game with Every Step!
The HETP Activity Tracker is a versatile fitness watch designed for both men and women, featuring 24-hour heart rate and blood pressure monitoring, GPS tracking, and an IP67 waterproof rating. With its sleek OLED display and compatibility with various devices, this smart watch is perfect for anyone looking to enhance their fitness journey while staying connected.
Age range | Kid |
Color | W11-grey balck |
Compatible with | Tablet, Smartphone |
Display type | OLED |
Features | Multisport Tracker, GPS, Notifications |
Sport | Fitness |
Batteries included? | No |
Brand | HETP |
Manufacturer | HETP |
Package Dimensions | 13.4 x 8.9 x 3 cm; 73 Grams |
ASIN | B09JP47YQD |
A**R
If you have low expectations you will be sufficiently blown away
I bought this more out of curiosity and experiment. The blood pressure claim surprised me and after a bit of thought decided to purchase. For the price I really was not expecting much, but after 5/6 days and a recharge I am really impressed. I had a jawbone a couple of years ago which was ok, but the strap snapped after 7 months. I decided to leave this type of product and technology for a while as I expected this to progress fast. That is an understatement.Build quality seems fine and does the job. It is comfortable with reassuring old fashioned buckle strap. The features are incredible and work flawlessly so far. The battery life again beyond expectations is about 5 days. The phone app is relatively basic but does the job. The data inputs from Sleep analysis (which is relatively simple - what more do you want) and constant heart rate and blood pressure monitoring is a real eye opener. The step count may be a bit over stepping but gives a guide. I like the sedentary setting (which is configurable) is a useful feature. There are plenty of other features too. Just completed first battery recharge cycle, the strap pulls off and is stiff which I guess it needs to be so use careful strength. Once off the unit plugs into USB slot and took less than a couple of hours to charge.The instruction manual is direct translation and needs a bit of time to understand which is the only downside thing I can think of.If you have low expectations on this product I suspect you will be blown away like me. Well worth the money - bargain!
V**R
Pretty good for the price.
I recently bought a much cheaper, but supposedly similar-in-function fitness band, and it was absolutely useless. But I'm trying to improve my health, and was hooked on the idea of one which actually worked.So far, for about double the price, this is tens of times better value. I.e. it actually works. Kind of.I've checked the heart rate values against a pulse oximeter, and although the initial readings are sometimes a bit off, within only 30s it's usually close to less than 2% difference.I have no idea about the blood pressure, as I'll have to check this next time I get it measured professionally. It seems a bit gimmicky to me anyway, unless you have a history of problems in that area, in which case you probably want something more up-market than this anyhow.The step count seems reasonably accurate, although the distance calculation less so. At worse it's proportional to how many steps/distance you have done.The sleep monitor is to be taken with a pinch of salt. It definitely does NOT differentiate between lying in bed listening to podcasts, totally unable to get to sleep, and 'light sleep'. When I have been sleeping 'naturally' it's actually been surprisingly good, though.The best feature (and the only one the cheaper device actually performed at all passably) is the 'Sedentary alarm'. I sit at computer a lot, and my back suffers for it. This simple feature helps a surprising amount, compared to just using a standard count-down timer. With the latter you can forget to reset it when you get up before you 'have' to. You can forget to reset it when you get back from whatever break you have taken etc. With it on your wrist and automatically taking care of all this, I've found it really has made a difference.One odd thing I've seen, but not fully explored yet, is battery life. I say 'odd' because after a full charge, it can drop to 50-25% on the indicator Very rapidly. But then stays there for days. It has certainly been fully usable after a week of wearing it, almost all of that time indicating just about no power left.The app is OK-ish, once you get use to it. What I really like about this band (which the first device failed totally on) is that it will store data internally, and then sync with the app once it re-connects.Maybe this should be a 3 or even 2 star rating. If you need reliable data and want to use that to rigorously analyse and plan your health/fitness, then this is almost certainly not for you. But I bought it more as a new gadget/gimmick, really, and it does that job well; it's also definitely helped in seeing long term trends, being able to guilt me into trying harder to meet my steps target, and gets me off my ar$e on a regular basis.
A**C
Great for the money but highly innacurate for sport
I first got a fitbit fitness band years ago but soon dumped it as the tech was new and glitchy and the device was expensive, unreliable and uncomfortable. Early adopter woes.Fast forward a few years and I came across this fitness band. The price was so cheap and with the multitude of good reviews I decided to give this band a shot and see how far the tech had advanced in the past few yearsSo the good:Very comfortable to wear and causes no irritation to the skin like my previous band did.Excellent battery life, easily get 5 days with daily workouts which deplete the battery more when in "sport" mode than when in "normal mode"Pedometer is accurateHeart rate is accurate (but not for EXERCISE! See below)Blood pressure is amazingly accurate once you set up your own BP profile (use an accurate arm cuff BP device to get a reading and plug that into the app and the device will make adjustments for future readings) I was very surprised the BP was accurate as I thought this would be the most gimmicky and useless feature.Sleep tracking is good, it detects sleep automatically and seems to track deep and light sleep pretty well. If I have a bad night's sleep I can see that in the data the next morning, so it seems like it's doing its job.Phone alerts are reliable and it's useful to see texts, emails and call notifications on your wrist.The Bad:Heart rate monitor is USELESS during exercise. I tested the HR monitor extensively at rest and it was pretty much bang on most of the time but in the gym the readings just go crazy. The band's HR reading was showing me at 96BPM but a manual check came in at 147BPM. That's a 50% discrepancy!!....I mean the readings are so out it's comical. I tried moving the band further up my arm, tightened the strap, loosened the strap but I would always get the SAME wrong readings. Using this to track you HR during sport is pointless which is surprising because I would have thought the HR tech would have matured a lot by now.Sport tracking is poor. I do a lot of stationary cycling at the gym but the band doesn't seem to understand any exercise unless you are moving. I tracked my calorie burn and output on an exercise bike which came in at 290Kcal with an average HR of 135BPM. The sport tracker showed a calorie burn of 46Kcal with an average HR of 94BPM, these results are just useless, I was spent after a tough ride and the tracker thought I was hardly working.The screen is clear and easy to read mostly but some of the lettering is small and difficult to make out, I would prefer slightly smaller icons and slightly bigger readouts..but that just might be my old man eyes talking.So overall I would say if you are dipping your toes into fitness bands and are not an elite athlete who needs super accurate training data it will probably be OK for you but it you are a bit more serious about the quality of your data maybe look elsewhere.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 months ago