จากตัวติดตามฟิตเนสราคาถูกที่ดีที่สุด Wyze Band เป็นเครื่องเดียวที่มี Alexa ในตัว เมื่อคุณพูดใน Wyze Band คุณสามารถขอให้ Alexa ควบคุมอุปกรณ์สมาร์ทโฮมที่เชื่อมต่อของคุณ เรามีปัญหาการเชื่อมต่อเล็กน้อยในการตรวจสอบของเรา แต่สนุกกับการเปิดไฟอัจฉริยะของเราในสไตล์ James Bond
สำหรับผู้ที่มองหาสีสันสดใส จอแสดงผล Xiaomi Mi Band 4 เป็นตัวติดตามฟิตเนสราคาถูกที่ดีที่สุดสำหรับงาน You can customize the watch face with a ton of cute, colorful designs in the Mi Fit app, and also set up personalized alerts and control music playing from your smartphone.
Fitness and sleep tracking on the Mi Band 4 were good, not great, but on a par with most other cheap fitness trackers. However, the Mi Band 4’s 20-day battery life meant we only had to worry about recharging it once a month.
+Built-in GPS, heart rate monitor+Sleep and swim tracking
Reasons to avoid
–Too big for smaller wrists–GPS signal takes a while to lo ck on
The Huawei Band 3 Pro seemingly has everything you could want in a cheap fitness tracker: A colorful OLED touchscreen display, heart rate-monitoring, built-in GPS and in-depth sleep analysis. It even has swim-tracking, and you can use it as a remote shutter for your smartphone’s camera. And all for $70—it’s hard to find all these features in something so inexpensive.
But the Band 3 Pro has a few things we wish could be improved. Its metal frame is too bulky for small wrists, its GPS took forever to capture a signal, and its heart rate data isn’t entirely accurate.
This basic fitness tracker lasts a year on a charge.
Specifications
Size: 0.75 x 0.37 inches. Circumference: 5.83 to 8.46 inches (large), 4.80 to 7.40 inches (regular).
Weight: 0.96 ounces
Display: 0.43 x 0.43 inches, 88 x 88 pixels
Water resistance: 50 meters
Heart rate monitor: No
GPS: No
Sleep tracking: Yes
Smartphone notifications: No
Battery life: 1 year
Reasons to buy
+Long battery life+Comprehensive app
Reasons to avoid
–No heart rate monitor
The least expensive of Garmin’s fitness trac kers, the Vivofit 4 covers the basics: Steps and sleep. And that’s all that some people need or want.
This cheap fitness tracker doesn’t have a heart rate sensor, built-in GPS, touch screen or the ability to receive notifications from your phone. But, it’s good at recording your daily motion, and Garmin’s app lets you set custom goals, challenge other Garmin users, and even show the local weather on the Vivofit 4. And, this fitness tracker will last up to a year on a charge.
A basic fitness tracker that looks like a classic watch.
Specifications
Size:
Weight:
Display: 38mm, analog
Water resistance: 50 meters
Heart rate monitor: No
GPS: No
Sleep tracking: Yes
Smartphone notifications: No
Battery life: 1 8 months
Reasons to buy
+Classic, stylish design+Excellent battery life
Reasons to avoid
–No heart rate monitor
Like other popular Withings wearables, the Move looks like an analog timepiece with a round display and traditional watch hands. But an in-laid subdial on the watch face marks your progress toward your daily activity goal.
This tracker doesn’t have a heart rate sensor. It also lacks smartphone notifications, so you can’t respond to texts (or even know when you receive them). Its fitness-tracking is pretty basic, though it does offer connected GPS when you take your phone for a run. This stopped working for me at one point, but unpairing and repairing the watch to your phone will fix the issue.
What the Withings Move lacks in advanced features, it makes up for in spades with lengthy battery life. The watch lasts 18 months (yes, months) without needing to be charged.
In a sea of smartwatches and fitness trackers that need to be juiced up daily — or at least once every few days — the Move is refreshingly low-effort. The only time I felt the need to take it off was after a run, to give my skin a break while I showered. If battery life is your highest priority, there aren’t many other fitness trackers that can last longer than a year without needing to be charged. But you sacrifice quite a few features to get lengthy battery life in a light, cheap, stylish package.
How to choose the best cheap fitness tracker for you
When looking for an inexpensive fitness tracker, you’re going to have to make some tradeoffs, but that doesn’t mean you should have to accept any compromises. The best cheap fitness trackers come with many of the same features as more expensive models, so here’s what you should look for:
Automatic workout tracking: Ever forget to press the Start button when you went out for a run? There’s nothing more frustrated than not getting credit for your exercise, which is why a good fitness tracker can automatically detect when you start running or biking, and log that event accordingly. Heart rate monitor: Unless you want to wear your fitness tracker as a pendant, this is a table-stakes feature that will give you not only much better insight into your fitness, but your health, too. That’s because adding heart-rate data gives you a more holistic look into your body, both awake and sleeping. Decent battery life: A fitness tracker needs to last at least two days on a charge. Otherwise, you won’t be able to track things such as sleep and other metrics that require you to keep it on your wrist for extended periods of time.
How we test cheap fitness trackers
Our testing methodology for cheap fitness trackers is pretty much the same as how we test pricier fitness trackers. We wear the device for a week or so, and explore its various features. For starters, how comfortable is the device to wear? Given that they’re designed to be on your wrist 24/7, you want a fitness tracker that feels like it isn’t even there.
If a fitness tracker has a heart rate monitor, we check its accuracy against other known trackers, as well as our own intuition. Generally, heart rate monitors are pretty accurate at this point, but the variance comes in how quickly they can respond to changes in your heart rate.
When working out, we see how easy it is to read a tracker’s display; if the numbers are too small, it’s hard to make them out when your arm and body is moving. And, if the controls are too small, it’s hard to do things such as change your music or switch screens.
Lastly, we check the battery life claims of the manufacturer. For the most part, they’re pretty accurate, but when using features such as GPS or streaming music, battery life can degrade much more quickly.
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