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Strava’s Expands Cycling Best Efforts, and Starts Pushing Routes to All Polar Devices

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For this Thursday’s sports tech quickie, I’m going to blend two things with the word Strava into one post. One being entirely Strava-driven, the other being almost entirely Polar-driven. Together, they form one post.

With that, let’s dive into it.

Strava Expands Cycling Best Efforts:

Strava is expanding their categories for best efforts, to now include both a distance/time parameter, as well as a best power for a given time-duration. This is in addition to the existing ‘Elevation’ and ‘Longest Ride’ options. This feature is being expanded for paid Strava Subscribers.

The way it works is simple, you’ll tap the ‘You’ option in the bottom of the Strava app, and then you’ll see categories for ‘Longest Ride’, Distance, Elevation, and Power. If you tap those categories, you’ll get your top results for each one. You can remove efforts from the list if they’ve got faulty data (as was the case for a boatload of mine).

Heck, I’m not even sure on many of these power meter ones, as you can see – one of them is literally titled ‘Calibration Ride’, which, is probably a pretty good indicator it’s dorked up. Note that I’m talking about the power meter, not Strava.

The preset options are:

Distances: 10 km, 10 mi, 20 km, 40 km, 50 km, 50 mi, 80 km, 90 km, 100 km, 100 mi, 180 km

Power/time intervals: 5 seconds, 30 seconds, 1 minute, 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 20 minutes, 30 minutes, 1 hour, and 2 hours

You can also tap to analyze these efforts over time. Given my data is mildly questionable at this point, here’s a much prettier picture from Strava, for someone who I presume is not testing power meter accuracy:

As always with software updates, it’s often the culmination of a bunch of smaller features that people appreciate most – rather than one big feature. Ya know, like Dark Mode.

Strava Routes Sync to Polar:

Next up, we’ve got a Polar-led project, which is the addition of Strava Routes to Polar devices. This was somewhat buried in yesterday’s announcement of the Polar Grit X2 Pro, but actually applies to not just that watch, but all Polar watches that support routes (e.g. breadcrumb routing). Thus whether you have a map-capable Polar watch like the Vantage V3/Grit X2 Pro, or, if you’ve got any other Polar watch that can do breadcrumb-style trails – this new feature works for you.

However, in order to get it working you’ll need to re-authorize your Strava account, so if you don’t do that, you may be wondering why things aren’t showing up. Here’s the quick and dirty on how to get it working, and how it works.

First up, head to Polar Flow, and into the Favorites section. This is where you’d see Komoot Routes and Strava Segments if you had those previously, as well as anything else you’ve favorited from a structured workout standpoint. In the middle, you’ll see a button for Strava re-authorization. Or, if you never had Strava authorized before for activity sync, I think you’ll see the option to connect it there.

The reason you need to re-authorize it, is that Polar is now requesting the ‘Routes’ data from Strava, versus previously they just requested the ability to push your activities to Strava, plus pull your Strava Segments (for watches with Strava Live Segments).

You’ll tappity-tap through to authorize that:

After that, it’ll take you back to this settings page to show you that it’s been reconnected to Strava. This is also a good time to check out any other connections you may have, and do any house cleaning as appropriate.

Now at this point, you’ll see all of your favorited Strava Routes listed within Polar Flow. In my case, I apparently have a lot – roughly 250 routes. This is where it’d be great to see Strava have some sort of organization system for routes. Be it by country, region, custom, etc… Mine is basically just a dumpster fire of routes and concepts I create.

The thing is, Polar’s watches can ‘only’ sync up to 100 favorites to the watch (inclusive of Komoot, Strava, workouts, etc…). In my case, given I had a gazillion more routes than Strava can sync, it seemed to just pick which ones to sync by random. It certainly wasn’t by most recently created, nor by name, or anything else I could figure out. You can change which ones are synced by simply toggling them on and off.

Also, the push from Strava to Polar doesn’t quite seem to be super-instant. The routes don’t seem to immediately show up, even if you refresh the browser page. Not a big deal as long as you know, but if you’re sitting there trying to figure out why a route hasn’t shown up the second you create it…just…umm…grab a coffee. Or, hit the ‘Refresh’ button within the Flow Routes page, which forces it over faster (different from your browser refresh page). I just wish there was some organization/sorting to the route list. The ‘Quick Demo Hike’ route I created a moment ago, is listed just randomly in the middle of a list of routes from all assortment of times and dates.

Once it’s there and selected, then go ahead sync your Polar watch to Polar Flow. After which, you’ll open up the sport menu and choose the sport type like usual (e.g. Run/Bike/etc…), and then tap the upper left button to select a route.

Once selected, you’ll see the usual info about the route, including an overview (with map if map-capable watch) and the ability to do the route forwards/backwards, and from a mid-point.

Now unlike the Komoot routes, these routes are *NOT* including Turn-by-Turn directions. Thus, it’s breadcrumb-style routing only. It doesn’t matter if you have a device with maps (Vantage V3/Grit X2 Pro), or a device without maps, it’s all the same experience. The only (obvious) difference is that the map ones will simply show you the maps below breadcrumb line. Again, there’s no turn notification, only off-course notifications. The blue is the planned route, the red is my current track.

As I approached the turn, I don’t get any turn notifications (I was specifically on another data page), but you should eventually get a wrong-direction prompt at some point after overshooting enough (like below).

Still, it’s great to see them light this up for all Polar watches, and not just save it for the newer ones. Further, it’s nice that you don’t need any new firmware for this. For the Vantage V3 watches, the April 3rd firmware update (FW v2.0) will add the Strava icon like you see above on the Grit X2 Pro.

With that – thanks for reading!

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