Fitbit Not Accurately Counting Floors
My floors havbe an 11 foot threshold.
Fitbit not accurately counting floors. Yet fitbit is not trying to fix this issue rather just give this explanation over over again. The conditions for your tracker to record one floor are for you to move forward while there is an elevation gain of at least 10 feet. If you d prefer to use pair your computer with your fitbit here s our guide on how to set up fitbit connect on your mac or pc. Let me know if you have any doubts.
When your fitbit shows a four digit code enter it into the app. What is important to keep in mind is that it is not the elevation itself that causes the floors to be counted it is the changes in air pressure. Devices may track floors while doing everyday tasks such as opening doors driving or riding elevators or escalators or from abrupt weather and atmospheric. Your device registers 1 floor when you climb about 10 feet or 3 meters.
It will not make my dailly accurate i have to drive to the nearest elevator but might be a way to at least get the cumulative total accurate. Calories burned accuracy verdict. Every fitbit device i have owned that tracks stairs has not been terribly accurate. My staircase certainly goes up more than 10 feet but there is a ending in the middle of it.
Not a big issue for me. For example closing the door of a car or opening it can cause a slight change in air pressure that the fitbit could mistake for a floor climbed. Not very accurate but the fitbit flex is the best of the bunch. Fitbit devices that count floors have an altimeter sensor that can detect when you re going up or down in elevation.
The fitbit most accurately estimated the energy expenditure of golfing. Regarding your question your fitbit tracker doesn t count actual stairs. It is annoying to get 1 or 2 climbs when i have done 12 to 20 in a day. Fitbit devices that count floors have an altimeter sensor that detects when you go up in elevation.
Now that you ve set up your personal profile and paired your fitbit to your phone the syncing process should. This is the most ridiculous things i ve ever heard for counting floors. Your device registers one floor when you climb about 10 feet at one time. Because the device looks for continuous motion pausing when you go up a flight of stairs can cause the device to not count the floor.
This will count as one floor. The fitbit community is a gathering place for real people who wish to exchange ideas solutions tips techniques and insight about the fitbit products and services they love. So whenever you check out your fitbit stats just know that the listed number of calories burned is probably lower than what you really burned. The same can happen when you turn the shower on.
Your device uses changes in barometric pressure combined with the steps you take to calculate floors climbed. So back to flex 2 which does not even pretend to do floors.