Apple Watch Ultra In-Depth Review: It’s a Start! | DC Rainmaker

2022-09-23 20:20:10 By : Ms. Lijuan Zhong

The Apple Watch Ultra is Apple’s real first foray into a watch suited for endurance sports, and other sporty adventures. Sure, Apple’s WatchOS 9 update for many of their other watches, including the recent Apple Watch Series 8, has brought a massive slate of new features aimed at that crowd – such as running power, triathlon support, and more.

But historically, one of the biggest blockers to many athletes using an Apple Watch was lack of battery life, combined with lack of buttons. The Ultra aims to solve both of those concerns, while adding in a number of other features along the way, such as the emergency siren.

I’ve been testing the Apple Watch Ultra, and in particular, yesterday I put it to the ultimate test: Could it survive a 14+ hour non-stop trail run/hike through the Alps? And if it could, how well would it handle such a mission. In this review, I’ll cover that, plus plenty more in terms of day-to-day use, as well as other new features like the new emergency siren and the action button.

Finally, note that Apple sent me out a media loaner Apple Watch Ultra edition, which as always will head back to them shortly once I’ve wrapped up with a few other tests. If you found this review useful, feel free to hit up the links at the end of the site, or consider becoming a DCR Supporter. With that – let’s begin!

The Apple Watch Ultra is basically an Apple Watch Series 8 at its core, and then has an added slate of hardware and software features/differences above that. In other words, when comparing an Apple Watch Ultra to a Series 7 (prior year), you basically first need to consolidate all the new Series 8/WatchOS9 changes, then once you’ve got those identified, you can add in the differences from Series 8 to Ultra. Got it? Good.

So, to start, here’s the more general hardware changes first from Series 7 to Series 8:

– Improved gyroscope – New high-g accelerometer (for vehicle crashes) – Wrist temperature sensor

And then here’s the Ultra-specific hardware differences:

– Increased case size to 49mm – New titanium case with sapphire glass display – Added a new button, called the Action button, designed for glove usage – Increased size of the rotating digital crown for glove usage – Increased water resistance to WR100 (100m) for dive usage – Added an extra speaker for louder outside volume – Now has three microphones for wind-cancellation audio – Added an 80db alarm siren, for emergency usage/attention – Added dual-frequency/multi-band GNSS for higher accuracy GPS tracks – Increased standby battery life to 36 hours, or up to 60 hours in Low Power Mode – Added Low Power Workout Mode, which Apple says can handle an Ironman race (with GPS). – Increased Display Brightness to 2,000 Nits – Cellular is built into every Apple Watch Ultra – Changed to new braided charging cable with standard Apple Watch charging puck – Now three different Apple Watch Ultra bands (more on that later).

And while the software side has a massive slate of changes, including fitness and non-fitness, here’s a look at the sports/fitness changes first, all except the end ones go to Series 8 units too, but the end ones marked ‘Ultra’ are specific to Ultra mode:

– Compass App: Revamped user interface – Compass App: Added new waypoints option (saving, navigating to) – Compass App: Added Backtrack capability to save a track without starting a workout – Compass App: Added Backtrack to track back following your route – Workout App: Adding three new running form metrics for efficiency: Vertical Oscillation, Stride Length, and Ground Contact Time – Workout App: Can now see heart rate zones during the workout zones – Workout App: Can now create new custom workouts, including repeats based on distance or time intervals – Workout App: New alerts for heart rate zones, cadence, and other metrics (not shown yet) – Workout App: New Running Power support, now natively tracks running power – Workout App: Revamped data pages with more data per page – Workout App: Will race against past workouts, which are saved to the workout app – Workout App: Triathletes get triathlon support including auto-switching between swim/bike/run and triathlete tracking time – Workout App: Adding kickboard swim detection – Workout App (coming later this year to the US): Track mode for running tracks – [Ultra] Added Dive app (called ‘Depth’) for diving, supports dives up to 40m (140ft) – [Ultra] Added Workout App Precision start option, means you can avoid the 3…2…1 countdown sequence and start exactly when you want with known GPS lock – [Ultra] Workout App now supports up to 7 data fields on a data page (6 customizable + time) – [Ultra] Added New Way Finder watch face (day use), plus a night use version

Finally, we get to pricing. Here’s where we see the biggest jump. While the Apple Watch SE price decreased slightly, and the Apple Watch Series 8 pricing remained the same as the prior year, the Ultra introduced itself at a far higher price point. Here are the basics of the lineup:

Apple Watch SE (2022): $249 Apple Watch Series 8: $399+/$499+ with LTE Apple Watch Ultra: $799

Note that if you’re in Europe, it’s even more pricey. It’s 999€, which is btw what I paid when I ordered mine (this loaner unit will go back to them once mine comes in). And the bands? Those are an eye-watering 99€ each.

Got all that? Good. Let’s dive into it.

This first section is all about the basics of the watch itself, primarily from a fitness/health standpoint. So things like usability of the touchscreen, buttons, and then all the fitness/health bits around activity tracking, sleep, and more. For more general non-fitness aspects like calendaring or watch faces, I’ll be skipping over that. There’s already a million sites/articles that cover that, and despite the Ultra getting an extra button – none of that changes.

To begin, let’s talk about the buttons and controls – since those are somewhat new here, specifically the new ‘Action Button’. While that button adds specific functions, it also actually adds functions when used in conjunction with the other buttons. As you can see below, the Apple Watch Ultra has three dedicated buttons. On the right side there’s the digital crown, which is both a button and a rotating dial. That’s protected on the Ultra edition by a so-called ‘button guard’, making it tougher to accidentally press under jackets or long sleeves. And with the larger size, it’s viable to use the digital crown with gloves – even underwater. Below that is a secondary button, which acts as an app switch of sorts. It too has a button guard around it.

Then, there’s the new Action button, hanging out on the other side of the watch. This button can be programmed to perform a specific action when pressed. The first press is to open a given app (such as opening the Workout App in Running mode). Then within an app it performs a specific action (like starting a workout, or changing sports in triathlon mode). Additionally, Action + Bottom Right button will Pause the workout.

Ironically, this button doesn’t have a button guard around it. And I can confirm I’ve accidentally pressed it a number of times since I started testing it. Usually it’s if I’m relaxing on a couch or some other position where my arms/hands might be crossed. It seems to find the perfect way to press the button, which in my case opens up to start a run workout. I guess it’s always trying to get me to run.

Meanwhile, the screen itself is an always-on touchscreen, which is rated for 36 hours of usage. The only exception to this is if you put it in Low Power mode (which gets up to 60 hours of standby watch time). Still, even in that mode, once you raise your wrist the watch turns the display on. Apple’s gesture-based algorithm is pretty good, so it’s usually responsive. That said, I’d recommend you leave it in regular mode as it otherwise reduces some functions (turns down LTE to once per hour checking, turns off some heart rate related notifications, and turns off background HR recording for non-workout usage).

While the Ultra battery life means you’ll probably be charging every other day, many ask ‘when’ is the best time to quick charge it. I find the best time is just after I get to my desk and start doing e-mails and such first thing in the morning. That’s a good block of time where it can charge and I’m not missing out on any activity tracking.

Now, before we get to activity tracking, note that we can change the watch face displayed on the unit. Apple provides a handful of watch faces, on which you can customize the so-called ‘complications’. These are basically the tidbits of data on them. I ebb and flow with the season as to which watch face I like, sometimes just some more technical stuff, and sometimes the one that automatically pulls photos from my phone so that each time I glance at it, I get a new favorited photo. In this case, it’s just the new compass watch face:

I’ve often talked about the subtle integration bits that Apple has on the Apple Watch that seals the deal for a lot of people, and this is one of those. There’s no complex setup, it just works, and every time (literally) I look at my wrist there’s a new photo, typically of my family or a memorable moment. Contrast that with other watches where you set the watch face photo and it’ll likely stay that way for years. And of course, plenty of them have sports/fitness metrics that can be displayed on the watch face, or customized as well. Even 3rd party apps have the ability to provide data which can be selected from complications.

So let’s turn our attention to the activity tracking pieces. In the Apple fitness realm, everything revolves around the ‘rings’. Apple uses a three-color ringed approach to monitoring your daily activity levels. These rings have daily goals, and complete a circle (ring) each time you achieve that goal. For example, the blue standing ring is goaled by default at 12 hours of standing. Which means you need to stand once every hour, ideally 12 hours of the day. The pinkish-red is for ‘Moving’, and the green is for ‘Exercise’.

If you swipe down from the rings, you’ll see how you’re doing in each category, as well as a bit of a timeline on the day. This was a relatively busy day for me, but it’s not over yet – so the rings aren’t fully complete. You can also see total steps, total distance, and floors climbed listed one swipe lower.

Also, DesFit is always at a solid disadvantage to me from a photographic standpoint, given I’m 7 hours ahead of him.

Of course, like any activity tracking platform, all of this is synced to the companion app on your phone, called ‘Fitness’. This app is only available on iOS (that’s the phone platform, so it’s not available on iPad or any other device type). In turn, the app technically pulls data from Apple Health, which is the health/fitness repository that Apple has on iOS (and, since it’s not on iPad, it’s why the Fitness app isn’t on iPad and why the Apple Watch isn’t supported on iPads).

In any case, within the Fitness app, you can see your daily totals as well as longer-term trending bits.

There’s also the ability to display trends over time. However, this takes 180 days of data before it starts (it used to take “just” 90 days). As I said in my Apple Watch Series 8 review, and for years prior, seems like an absurdly long time for basic trends like whether or not you’re standing/walking more this week compared to last week. Every other fitness platform on the planet (and my 4-year-old daughter with her activity tracker) can tell you that if you walked more steps this week than last week, your trend is upwards. I know I’ve harped on this before, but I’m hoping that with Apple’s new focus on sports/fitness, they’ll look at some of these legacy silliness items, and consider it as low-hanging fruit to address in hopes of pulling in other sportier users.

Though, as you can see above for the running pace one, it’s actually interesting in that it’s pulling from Apple Health, and not Apple Watch specifically. At least, best I can tell. Thus, my average is skewed upwards (slower), likely because of non-GPS-based data sources contributing to my Apple Health data set that aren’t as accurate.

In any case, let’s look at some other data bits, one of those is sleep. Apple has increased its sleep focus on WatchOS 9, namely via adding sleep stage data. When sleeping, your watch goes into a sleep mode, where the display dims substantially and shows just the time. You can change the exact times this occurs, which Apple calls your ‘Sleep Schedule’. This doesn’t dictate when you can sleep or the tracking of it, but just when the display dims.

Once you wake up the following morning, you’ll get your sleep data displayed in the sleep app on the watch:

You can see its estimated sleep stages/phases, as well as the sleep times. I generally don’t rate/judge sleep stage accuracy for a few reasons, instead focusing on the exact sleep times as a better proxy. The reason I don’t look at sleep stage/phase accuracy is that the comparative technologies that are available to do so aren’t all that accurate to begin with (about 80% accurate in most cases), and thus, we’d never judge a heart rate sensor or GPS track against something that was wrong 1/5th the time. It does seem like companies are at least getting more consistent here (Apple included), but I wouldn’t focus on this a ton at this time.

Your sleep data is then sent to your iPhone, where you can view it within the Apple Health app. As noted earlier, this is Apple’s giant repository for health/fitness data. You can see details about not just that night’s sleep, but previous data at the week/monthly/6-month level.

As with my Apple Watch Series 8 and SE 2nd gen reviews, I’m continuing to see quirks/inaccuracies with WatchOS 9 sleep tracking, specifically around waking times. For example this past Saturday I woke up at 8AM for less than 5 minutes as the kids awoke, and then went back to sleep for nearly 2.5 hours (till around 10:30AM). Yet, the Apple Watch ended my sleep tracking at 8AM. Whereas Garmin, Whoop, and Oura all properly nailed my actual waking time at 10:27AM. And again, this is hardly the first sleep-related accuracy issue I’ve seen on WatchOS 9.

You can also get some sleep-related trends in the Health app, such as respiratory rate (aka breathing rate), and sleep time. It even thinks I’m doing better this year than last year, clearly it hasn’t yet accounted for this week and next week in those calculations…

A new feature for Apple WatchOS 9 is more detailed HRV values (heart rate variability). HRV is an area that has exploded in interest in the last couple of years, with various fitness/sports companies leaning heavily on it to try and estimate how your body is recovering. While that can be tricky (at best) to do from HRV values, Apple isn’t quite going into that realm (yet). Instead, it’s just (slightly) increased the data provided by the watch to Apple Health. Previously, it gave only one data point per night (which is useless). Now, it provides more data (about once every 5-15 mins it seems), though it only does so if you specify that you have an Afib condition as diagnosed by a doctor. Once that’s toggled to yes, then you get a bunch more HRV data. This appears to be a random side effect, and I suspect one that Apple should easily be able to solve by just tracking that HRV data more frequently no matter the Afib toggle.

Of course, the most notable Apple Watch Series 8 & Ultra watch’s data point is the new wrist temperature tracking. This metric won’t show your exact body/skin/wrist temperature, but rather change relative to the baseline (e.g. + 1°F). This is similar to how other companies do it, as it’s a bit more useful and easier to consume. There are two ways you can use this data. The first is that women can use this data to get historical cycle tracking data, including (historical) ovulation estimates. The second is that you could use this data to find trends between nights where your body/skin temperature is higher or lower and you’ve got better or worse sleep. For example, a hot room might lead to poor sleep, so you could potentially figure that out and adjust accordingly.

This starts showing in the app after 5 nights of data, and then also shows more female cycle tracking data once you get far deeper historical data. Here’s a shot I took of someone’s phone at Apple with much more historical data to exemplify this:

Somewhat notably, if you have two capable temperature tracking devices (e.g. an Apple Watch Series 8 and Ultra), you reset your 5-day waiting period when you switch devices. I realize this is 100% a reviewer-only problem, but hey, I figured I’d mention it.

You can see the estimated ovulation dates on the calendar, again looking retrospectively, as well as on the watch:

I’m going to take a guess that Apple is probably starting with the retrospective ovulation dates because honestly, nobody is going to get super upset if Apple mistakenly identifies historical data. However, forward-looking ovulation data is an entirely different matter. We see both Oura and Whoop doing work/features in this area today, and with reasonably good accuracy (even for irregular cycles, with enough data). I’m guessing by this time next year we’ll probably see Apple do the same, having leveraged a year’s worth of temperature data within their internal testing. For most women, having forward-looking estimates is really where the value is (especially for those with irregular cycles as well as ovulation estimates).

With that, let’s dive into the sports features in more depth.

The vast majority of new sports features in the Apple Watch Ultra come from WatchOS 9, and are shared with not just the new Apple Watch Series 8, but also the Apple Watch SE. So that includes everything from heart rate zones, to backtrack functionality, to custom workouts, running power support, to triathlon support. It’s a massive leap forward for Apple in terms of sports functionality, enabling them to immediately be more competitive in the sports arena, especially in running.

First up, we’ll start by getting a workout set up. To do so, you’ll crack open the watch’s Workout app, which is the app with the little runner person on it. From there you’ll see a slate of sport modes to choose from. If you look at the upper right corner of each one you’ll see three dots, this allows you to set a specific goal, or a custom workout.

For example, in running the default would be just to track a run. But you can also now create structured workouts, or just simple workouts with a defined end goal (like distance or time).

Here, for example, you can create a 6x800m structured workout (though obviously, creating Yasso 800’s at 8x would have been a ‘proper’ example). When you create these workouts you can add warm-up/work/recovery/cooldown segments, as well as repeat sections.

You can give this workout a title, as well as specify unit views for the workout itself. And within these workout views, is where you’ll see the ability to toggle fields/pages, like the new heart rate zones, as well as running efficiency metrics, including running power.

Heart rate zones can be set up on your phone, however oddly, at this time data pages/fields cannot be. Up through WatchOS 8/iOS15, you could actually modify workout data pages on your phone (Watch App > Workout > Workout View). However, with WatchOS 9/iOS 16, that feature/section is gone. All configuration must take place on the watch itself, which can be fairly tedious. It sounds like this will return, but didn’t quite make the cut for launch. You can still modify other things from the phone, like Auto Pause, and the new Workout Low Power Mode (more on that in a moment).

Assuming you’re ready to go, then you’ve got two choices with Apple Watch Ultra. You could go the ‘normal’ route for all Apple Watches up till now, and wait for the 3-second countdown. Once that countdown completes, it’s at that point that the watch goes off and gets GPS signal and HR acquisition – not before. However, the Ultra edition includes a new ‘Precision Start’ feature, that lets you first open the workout up, then see the signal status before you begin:

This might sound like a trivial thing, but for Apple it’s a moderately big deal. Though, that said, it’s also something that *SHOULD ABSOLUTELY* be on all their watches, standard. You know, like every other GPS/sport watch since the beginning of time. Starting a run without GPS signal or HR signal makes no sense. So while I’ll give credit to Apple for adding it to Ultra, there’s no reason for it not to be on their other watches.

There’s also another change that’s notable. For all the new 2022 year watches, including the Apple Watch Ultra, Apple Watch Series 8, and Apple Watch SE 2nd Gen, Apple has changed how it does GPS lock. Specifically, it no longer depends on the phone like it used to (if the phone was within range). Now, it’s entirely self-standing in all scenarios. That has its pros and cons, depending on how you look at things. If you didn’t want it to drain your phone’s battery, it’s great (that’s me). But if you wanted longer battery life on your watch instead, it’s less ideal. Perhaps the best solution would be a simple toggle. I know I use the term ‘simple’ when in reality very little is simple in real life, but, given Apple previously had the feature – I’ve gotta imagine the ability to choose the GPS source can’t be that difficult.

In any case, once you’ve got Precision Start enabled, you’ll see the GPS status indicator at the top left, along with HR lock shown.

After you’re ready, you can press the action button to actually start your workout. You’ll see your data pages as you’ve configured them. With the Apple Watch Ultra, you actually get an even more extended data page, with up to 7 data fields (albeit one is the clock):

And you’ll get the new WatchOS 9 heart rate zone features. Note there’s only one set of zones though, so you can’t customize these per sport (which would be normal for most sport watches, as HR zones vary drastically between sports).

We’ll also get the new running power and running efficiency metrics. For these, you’ll need to be actively running, as running power won’t display while walking or hiking. I know this sounds obvious, but in reality, most other running power competitors do actually display running power while walking/hiking. The reason is that energy is still expended, and should be accounted for. This is especially notable if you look at trail/ultra running, where competitors will often power walk steeper hills. In this case, their power output might be no different than ‘running’, but isn’t accounted for here.

I suspect this is more of an algorithm accuracy issue, in part based on the possibility that the underlying wrist-based running efficiency metrics that drive the calculations for running power may lack the ability to gather this data accurately. It’ll be interesting to see if this changes over time. It wouldn’t surprise me, especially as they expand the footprint into the harder-core running crowd with the Ultra edition.

There’s also a new WatchOS 9 elevation page. This generally worked for me, but I stumbled into an odd bug where if the Auto End Workout reminder popped up (which doesn’t end the workout, but offers to), it stops tracking the elevation on this page in the background. The data is still good in the files afterwards. This triggered for me because I had set my hike to run, and in some steep near-summit sections, I was apparently going too slow on 15% gradient for the watch, so it offered to end the workout. You can see the gaps of green in this image – even though I never stopped hiking here. Also note the elevation field at the bottom is null, meaning it’s not showing live elevation anymore. This field caught-up about 15-20 seconds later, but the graph did not.

If doing a structured workout, you’ll see whether you’re in a Work or Recovery interval in the upper left side, as well as distance/time remaining in that interval. The structured workout piece is good here, though there isn’t any API for 3rd parties to access it like there is on other platforms. Meaning, a company like TrainingPeaks or such can’t simply export a workout to the device like most other sports watches can. Of course, Apple Watch itself is a platform where apps can be built and someone can build an entire app dedicated to that (and they do). But, I think the one thing Apple knows is that if they want to be true competitors in the endurance sports realm, they have to have these seemingly niche things. It’s the combination of a boatload of niche things for why someone chooses a Garmin watch over an Apple watch when it comes to sports tracking.

Now, many of you have asked about sensor support. The Apple Watch Ultra can natively pair to Bluetooth Smart heart rate straps. You can do this via the Bluetooth menu on the watch:

It cannot natively pair to any other sensor type, nor can it natively broadcast HR to 3rd party apps. However, 3rd party apps can fill both of the sensor pairing/broadcasting gaps. Take for example power meters, there are a few apps (and I’m sure more than I know) that can pair to Bluetooth power meters, such as WorkOutDoors. It can also pair to other sensor types as well. The native Strava Apple Watch app cannot pair to power meters (a seemingly obvious subscriber-only opportunity going forward).

However, WorkOutDoors doesn’t support the triathlon/multisport workout type, so for triathletes, you’re kinda out of luck. Realistically, the more I’ve thought about it, the more I think it’s key that Apple dive into supporting cycling power meters and cycling cadence sensors natively. Given the promotion of the Apple Watch as being viable for an iron-distance triathlon, the majority of Ironman triathletes are using power meters these days (and have been for years).

The good news for Apple is that while the BLE power meter spec is a moderate dumpster fire, it’s a contained dumpster fire. There’s really only a handful of power meter companies out there, and if I can have one of every one of these devices in the DCR Cave, then so can Apple. And for the most part, each manufacturer’s individual quirks carry across their entire product line. So once you solve for the 6-10 companies, you’ve solved for all the products.

As we wrap up this section, once your workout is complete you’ll get a basic summary displayed on the watch. However, it’s better to turn towards the Fitness app to see more data from your run, including all of that new running power/efficiency data. Apple’s actually done a pretty good job in expanding out this section a fair bit. Here’s another set for a different WatchOS 9 run I did with more complexity:

And then when it comes to getting your workout up to various platforms, you’ve got a few options. Some platforms like Strava & TrainingPeaks have their own apps that can pull in your workout data easily through the settings menus. While other platforms lack integrated connectivity and require a 3rd party app. In my case, I primarily use HealthFit to do all my workout syncing. It supports all the new running power and efficiency metrics, and is generally my go-to for data export to 3rd party platforms (and also, for most reviewers).

There are other options of course, RunGap being another popular one. Given Apple Watch and iOS are vast platforms with tons of apps on them, there are undoubtedly countless other options out there. In my case, I just use what has worked for me over the years reliably.

Apple WatchOS 9 includes a revamped compass app, which also includes the ability to create/save waypoints, create tracking, and then backtrack along a breadcrumb trail. These waypoints persist across sessions (e.g. they stay forever until deleted). There’s also basic compass navigation towards these waypoints. But that’s kinda it. At its core, using just the native apps, it’s entirely useless for any ultra-like navigation activity. Instead, its singular purpose today is mostly getting you back out of trouble.

Here, let me show you how it works. First, you crack open the compass. Sure, you’ll see a compass, but really it’s the other three buttons that the good stuff is within. At the lower left there’s a new button for saving waypoints.

You can give your location a name, icon, and color. These persist across sessions, and thus are accessible months – or even years later.

You can then see these waypoints in a list from the main compass menu, or on the little mini-radar-like-map instead (within the compass). When you select a given waypoint it’ll show a compass heading to that particular waypoint.

Note that there is no ‘map’ per se, it’s just a breadcrumb trail and compass heading.

However, that gets to the next feature, which is Backtrack. That feature records a breadcrumb trail of where you’ve been, and displays nearby waypoints you’ve previously saved. This doesn’t actually start automatically when you start a workout. Instead, you can manually start it, or it’ll automatically start when it detects a lower density of nearby WiFi signals (not just yours) and loss of cellular signal. Meaning, it thinks you’re going somewhere you might need help getting out of later.

Once started, it’ll plot data points approximately every 2 minutes, loosely connecting them with straight lines. This isn’t quite as high fidelity of data as their competitors, but in terms of getting yourself out of trouble, it’s likely good enough in most cases (crazy white-out snowstorms aside). You can then tap on a given historical waypoint to see the compass heading towards it, as well as navigate back to your start.

And this is where I ran into a pretty serious bug. Midway through my hike – when I was at the most remote location on my route with zero cell phone coverage and nobody for miles, the backtrack map/track went blank. It was as if nothing was recorded the entire time. Here’s (roughly) what it should look like:

Yet here’s what it looked like (taken again the next morning when I could reproduce the issue):

However, a few hours later in the hike, it showed back up again (with my full route). In discussing this with Apple late last night, they were able to quickly validate this is a bug. Specifically, it’s an enumeration bug. In my case, I could wait as long as 25 seconds before it enumerated. Of course, people like me certainly aren’t that patient, and I assumed it had died (a logical assumption). In reality, the data is/was always still there – it’s just the watch was taking its sweet time rendering it. The good news is that this bug will be fixed shortly in a firmware update. Still, I think there’s opportunity here for Apple to just have this feature enabled in the background anytime you start a run/hike/walk (or even any workout). There’s no downside to doing so, since you can’t always predict when you’re going to get lost (even if Apple thinks it can with an algorithm).

Finally, we get to the elephant in the room: Navigation.

Simply put, there is none. There is no built-in navigation/route loading on the Apple Watch (Ultra or otherwise). Thus, in the case of yesterday’s hike, I had to depend on a Garmin Epix watch for my route navigation. Obviously, for a watch focused on Ultra things, that’s not terribly ideal.

Of course, there are 3rd party solutions here. The most popular one is an app called WorkOutDoors (same app I mentioned for sensor pairing in the workout section). It’s been around forever, and has more features than a Toys R Us. In the context of this section, the main feature it has is the ability to import a route in, download map tiles, and then navigate across that route. And in that context, it works great.

And it has a gazillion more features beyond that. Customizable data pages, uploading to 3rd party platforms, connecting to 3rd party sensors, and on, and on, and on. Which, is also its downfall. Look, let me be super clear: WorkOutDoors is an awesome app, and a geek’s paradise. It’s amazing, especially given it’s just by a small independent developer.

However, being the product reviewer I am, it’s also overwhelmingly complicated (especially to configure), with a user interface that never said “no” to any user suggestion or new option. And while evaluating user features is key to any company/app, it’s such a heavy ship that it just turns off a lot of people. I think a ‘simple’ mode could go a long way here towards attracting new users.

But that gets to the core of it, and perhaps, to the core of the Ultra watch. Apple has laid the groundwork for an impressive watch down the road, but right now the navigational aspects on the Apple Watch are non-existent. Apple needs to heavily prioritize adding in basic routing/navigation, and basic Apple Maps offline tile downloads with map data for said routes. They should have an easy-to-use API that 3rd parties can latch into (akin to Garmin’s Connect Routes API), yet also support simple .GPX style imports.

I know someone at Apple is probably rolling their eyes, concerned that this is too geeky or whatnot. And that’s fine, but the simple reality is that doing endurance sports and long treks *IS GEEKY*. The navigation of those routes is a fundamental part of this sport, and today, those are done via very standardized file types that really need to be supported, before any trail/etc adventurer considers this watch for navigation purposes.

As I’ll say a lot: The foundation is laid, but it’s still just a foundation. The house isn’t there yet.

Within the Ultra-specific features realm, there’s a few core areas to look at that aren’t on the Apple Watch Series 8, they are:

– Action Button Features/Nuances – Emergency Siren – Battery Life

There’s also of course the dual-frequency/multi-band GNSS, but I cover that in the next section. Further, there’s the bands themselves, but those too I cover in other sections.

First up, let’s look at the Action Button. In reality, it’s more like a shortcut button. Specifically, it opens up a given app of your choosing when pressed. And then within that, it can be configured for a certain action. For example, you can configure it to open up not just the Workout app, but to do a specific workout type within it.

Once inside the workout app, the role of the button is more specific, such as starting/stopping a workout.  Note, that for some reason I get a lot of these Action button failures. I’m not really sure what it’s trying to tell me, or what I’ve done wrong.

Finally, you can long-hold it to access the siren and other emergency functions.

In this respect, it works as intended. However, it feels like it’s not quite baked yet. For example, yes, it stops a workout. But that can also accidentally happen via your wet coat touching the screen (as happened yesterday to me, four hours into my hike). So as useful as a dedicated button is, it’s not stopping the touchscreen from doing bad things (like when I caught it almost clearing my entire backtrack history, also yesterday).

In short, having the button is a good first step, but Apple really needs to dig a bit deeper into the use cases for it. Saving me one extra tap to open up the workout app isn’t really high on my priority list. But ensuring solid and reliable operation out in the elements is.

Next, there’s the emergency siren. This feature is an added speaker on the left side of the watch that screams at 86dB in a specific siren pattern, for upwards of 8 hours at a time. The pattern has specific portions in it (seen in my video), including an SOS in Morse Code.

It’s one of those features that if you see a demo of it indoors or outside just standing next to it, you’re like ‘Shrug, that’s not that loud’. But those 86dBs have a specific tone and pitch and an unusualness about them that really carry the distance. I went out this morning, placed it on a log, and then walked some 300 meters away – where I could very clearly still hear it. And this was in an area with tons of background noise.

I suspect in the right calm night scenario, the sound would easily travel 1KM, perhaps even 1 mile. One only need to spend the night in the wilderness to know just how well sound sometimes travels, and this unique tone/pitch works exceptionally well in that regard.

Finally, what about battery life? Well, in this case there’s a slate of different levels. First, the official claims:

Daily Smartwatch Mode: 36 hours GPS Workout Mode (dual-frequency/multiband): 12 hours Low Power Smartwatch Mode: 60 hours Low Power Workout Mode: No specific claim, but implied 15 hours

So, looking at each of these. First, is the daily smartwatch mode. In my case, I got an easy 48 hours, which had the watch charged to 92%, and then went down to 1% at exactly 48 hours (it ended up around 48hrs 20mins when it died). This is inclusive of two 1hr GPS workouts, and one 45ish minute indoor workout, plus sleep tracking, etc… So, in this case, it overachieved, though, it was not leveraging LTE.

Next, I went and tested the low power workout mode, to see how many hours I’d get there. As noted, Apple is a bit thin on the exact number here, but their official claim is that the average iron-distance triathlete can complete a race in it. Thus, if you look to Ironman for what that stat is, it’s 12.5 hours for men, and 13.5 hours for women. Therefore, I’m going to assume 14-15 hours.

Yesterday I went out for a long trail run/hike, starting with the battery at exactly 100% – hot off the charger and right into pressing start. In this scenario, I enabled low-power mode. That mode turns off the always-on display, so it becomes gesture-based only (which I was fine with). It doesn’t reduce any GPS or HR sampling, which remains at 1-second intervals (the same as everyone else).

For the first 8 hours or so, I was averaging a very consistent 5-6%/hour. However, around the 8-hour marker, it suddenly dropped 13%/hour for no apparent reason. Thankfully, after that it resumed its 4-6%/hour. I have no idea why the random drop occurred. At the end of 14 hours of trekking, I had 15% battery remaining.

So, that’d put me on target for about 17 hours of time, or a bit more if I didn’t have that random-giant battery drop. In other words, all within spec.

Finally, later this year Apple will be adding a secondary low-power mode for workouts specifically. In this mode it *will* reduce the GPS & heart rate sampling rates (the number isn’t quite finalized, but sounded like once per 2 minutes). They haven’t announced what that battery life will be, but I suspect it’ll be quite significant. Of course, that’s a pretty massive gap between 1-second recordings and 2-minute recordings. It’d be hard to see use in trail running/hiking/cycling adventures at 2-minute gaps. Though, other types of scenarios make a bit more sense I suppose.

Still, for the vast majority of people, having the 17-20 hours of today’s low-power workout mode is likely enough.

In this section I’ll compare the Apple Watch Ultra’s GPS (GNSS) capabilities to other units on the market, both multi-band and non-multi-band. Additionally, I’ll compare the HR sensor to a slate of other sensors, including chest straps, optical HR armbands, and other watches.

Note that in my case, my Apple Watch Ultra has LTE (of course, like all units), but that LTE is not activated. As such, it has no opportunity to ‘correct’ itself against known map data. It must figure it out by itself. Further, I didn’t bring my phone with me on these runs. The only exception is the hike, except in that case the phone was in airplane mode the entire time (no access to LTE data).

We’re just gonna dive right into the deep end here, with a combo dish involving a challenging GPS run into the tall buildings, as well as an interval workout. Why not do a twofer? First up, for this route I start off in relatively easy conditions with light tree cover. Then it gets more complex as I pass under some massive highway/train overpasses, which last over 100m in length of coverage.  A bit later I then do sweeps up and down the streets of the business district, with tall buildings (20-30 stories) separated only by either a single or two-lane road. In this case it’s comparing the Apple Watch Ultra (multi-band) on one wrist, to the Apple Watch SE (2nd gen) on the other, and then also with each hand I’ve got a Garmin Forerunner 955 (multi-band) and the other a COROS Vertix 2 (multi-band). Here’s the data set, and the overview:

First, starting off with the ‘easy’ section, this is a tree-lined path, in general most modern GPS units almost seem to snap to the track. Here we see it does that – all is well.

And going around a sharp 90° turn I didn’t see any Apple Watch Mario Karting, instead, a nice crispy track.

So, let’s kick it up a notch and head to the downtown building district. This has three sweeps that I do, or rather, three streets worth.

Zooming in, if we see the two lower passes, the lowest pass below all units do OK-enough. Some issues, but nothing crazy. However, the middle pass (upper pass on the below image), you can see the Apple Watch Ultra easily outperforms the others. Not to say it’s perfect (it isn’t), but it’s the best of the bunch in this situation.

Then we’ve got the last – and most difficult – pass. This section threw everyone for a loop. You can see the road in between the two sets of tracks. In this case the two Apple Watch units (Ultra and SE) plotted surprisingly similar tracks (despite being on opposite wrists). While the Garmin and COROS units plotted entirely different tracks. None of the watches were correct.

The rest of the run was pretty uneventful. So, let’s quickly look at the heart rate from it. In this case, I did intervals the entire run…just for fun:

It’s spot-on. Super happy there.

Now, let’s look at an openwater swim instead – note the color of the Ultra has changed here to purple (it was green in the previous one). Here you can see the Apple Watch Ultra on one wrist, and the Garmin Epix on another. I’ve also got a GPS unit on the swim-buoy as reference. You’ll immediately notice the Apple Watch has some serious issues here. The Garmin Epix throws down a scary-accurate track.

However, what’s notable is that the Apple Watch isn’t failing 100% of the time, rather only at certain points it goes crazy. Those points? The exact same points I’d pause to fix my leaky goggles. Meaning, I was briefly treading water. When I’d so so, the Apple Watch doesn’t correctly reconcile its GPS location before it begins, resulting in ‘things gone bad’.

Mind you, this isn’t the first time I’ve seen this happen to companies. In fact, it seems to almost always happen when companies switch GPS chipsets. It happened to Suunto a few years ago when they went to Sony, then it happened to Garmin for a summer, and then it happened to COROS when they first launched the Vertix 2. All were fixed within a few months. Given Apple has historically had industry-leading openwater swim accuracy, I’m going to take a guess this will get resolved soon.

Next, let’s dip inside quickly for a look at an interval indoor cycling ride:

As you can see above, it’s very accurate. Spot-on with the chest strap. Well, except for that moment when it crashes and you see the blue line. This was when I had taken a second screenshot (first was fine), and it immediately crashed the unit. In doing some digging, I think it’s actually a bug in their manual restart option. Specifically, you should be able to take a screenshot with a couple of double-presses of the right buttons. But, it didn’t take, so I held it down for a few seconds. Normally, it takes 10 seconds (per Apple Support documentation) to restart the watch, but in this case it actually reboots at 5 seconds. Thus, my ‘crash’.

In any case, the optical HR sensor here nails the peaks of this sprint in this workout, perfectly matching the chest strap.

So, let’s look at a few tidbits from my hike. Having skimmed through the entire track, frankly, it’s virtually identical. All the units are – the Garmin Epix, the Apple Watch Ultra, and then the Fenix 7 base & COROS Vertix 2 that I had strapped to my backpack. This section towards one of the summits is right up against some rock cliffs. Super close between all of them.

And then this section, which looks like a barren landscape (it kinda is), but it’s in the shadow of a huge bowl/cliff/whatever, so it’s got somewhat limited GPS signal opportunities. Also solid.  But again, so was everything from this near-70KM journey in the mountains.

Here’s the elevation chart, in meters. Skimming across it, the widest gap I could find between the four units was 10 meters. Most of the time they were a mere 2-4 meters apart. I don’t know what’s up with the COROS Vertix 2’s recorded altitude data and all the dropouts. That’s the data in the file.

Next, I’ve talked a lot about running power in various posts. First, was my complete Apple Watch running power deep-dive and comparison post this past summer, where I compared numerous runs to a slate of devices from all the major running power companies (Stryd, Polar, Garmin, and COROS). Then again last week with the Apple Watch Series 8 in-depth review, as well as the Apple Watch SE in-depth review. And the TLDR version is that as a reminder, there is no standard for running power, and how it’s calculated.

So, what each company includes or doesn’t include in their algorithm, which in turn will make the values higher or lower. While all these companies tend to trend pretty much the same, they do so at different ‘levels’. And the same is true of the Apple Watch Ultra edition, since that’s sharing the same algorithm as all other WatchOS 9 watches. You can see that below from my interval run against both Garmin and COROS (Polar, while not on this run, tends to sit in the middle usually).

While I think it’d be ideal for the running power industry to go shack up in a mansion Eye’s Wide Shut style and come together with regards to their powers, the main challenge for Apple today is simply that it doesn’t calculate running power while “walking”. The challenge with that is that walking still exerts energy, and the entire point of running power is stabilization of output (energy). This is even more important in trail/Ultra running, where many competitors will power-walk the steeper inclines, because it’s most efficient. However, Apple won’t calculate that, which negates the benefit of Apple’s power metric.

In any event, running power aside, I’m seeing strong results from Apple’s multi-band capabilities in the new Apple Watch Ultra, at least aside from swimming. On dry land activities, it seems to be performing about the same as other multi-band watches, and slightly better than the Apple Watch Series 8 and Apple Watch SE. For optical HR, that too seems to be solid, also performing at the upper end of optical HR sensors in the market today (the same place Apple has historically been).

(Note: All of the charts in these accuracy sections were created using the DCR Analyzer tool.  It allows you to compare power meters/trainers, heart rate, cadence, speed/pace, GPS tracks, and plenty more. You can use it as well for your own gadget comparisons, more details here.)

Whether or not the Apple Watch Ultra is for you, depends largely on what you plan to use it for. If you had or wanted an Apple Watch, but were held back by battery life, and perhaps button usability – then the Ultra largely solves that. Similarly, if you wanted more advanced running/workout metrics, then WatchOS 9 on the Apple Watch Ultra also solves that too. And, if you never knew you wanted an emergency siren on your wrist for when you fall off an embankment, then the Ultra is for you too (but seriously, that feature is surprisingly well executed).

However, as good as Ultra is for most existing Apple Watch users (or more mainstream prospective users), it falls short when it comes to features that you would need to complete an actual ‘ultra’ – that is, a long distance running race, or trek, or really any adventure in the backcountry. These gaps fall into a couple of different camps. Sure, there’s the bugs like the openwater swim one, or the disappearing compass backtrack one. I’m less concerned about those at the moment. Instead, it’s the navigational feature gaps, and sensor pairing/broadcasting gaps that are more key for Apple.

Despite taking the Apple Watch Ultra on this grand 14-hour Alps adventure yesterday, it didn’t actually serve much of a purpose. Meaning, it wasn’t the one navigating me to the finish line, pacing me up 3-hour climbs, or helping me find my way in the pitch-black dark. My Garmin Epix watch was. The Apple Watch was (mostly) dutifully recording that trek, but it wasn’t providing much actionable information. Apple needs to find a way to have the Ultra be the *key* to successfully completing these sorts of adventures, and the primary path to that is a robust navigation component.

The last bucket is usability. When it comes to a daily smartwatch for 24×7 usage, I’d argue Apple easily wins that competition – and has for years. No watch is as polished, app-deep, or well thought through as the Apple Watch for daily usage. And in theory, the new Action button on the Ultra aims to close that gap for the sports scene. The challenge is, it just doesn’t. Too many scenarios on the watch still require touch inputs – something that’s often impossible in rain, snow, cold weather conditions, and more. I shouldn’t ever have a situation on the Ultra where my run/hike/adventure gets ended simply due to a wet jacket briefly touching the display for a second. That should be a button, and a confirmation via another button.

At this point, it’d be easy for endurance athletes to dismiss the Apple Watch Ultra. And for the moment, yes, that probably makes sense. However, I sure as hell wouldn’t bet against Apple closing these gaps – and likely closing them quickly. They are keenly aware of these gaps, and also keenly aware that this is their first foray into this segment. And they seem more committed than I’ve ever seen them to vastly expanding their capabilities. If I was their competitors, I wouldn’t be concerned about this fall, I’d be concerned about next fall. I’d be concerned about what happens when Apple takes all of the feedback they’re getting today from the endurance sports reviewers, along with what will soon be months’ worth of feedback from regular consumers – and putting that to work.

And the good news is, that Apple tends to make such feature/software updates available to watches made years in the past. And every single shortcoming I’ve found is fixable in software, not hardware.

With that, thanks for reading!

Hopefully you found this review useful. At the end of the day, I’m an athlete just like you looking for the most detail possible on a new purchase – so my review is written from the standpoint of how I used the device. The reviews generally take a lot of hours to put together, so it’s a fair bit of work (and labor of love). As you probably noticed by looking below, I also take time to answer all the questions posted in the comments – and there’s quite a bit of detail in there as well.

If you're shopping for the Apple Watch Ultra (Alpine Loop Orange) or any other accessory items, please consider using the affiliate links below! As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. It doesn’t cost you anything extra, but your purchases help support this website a lot. Even more, if you use Backcountry.com or Competitive Cyclist with coupon code DCRAINMAKER, first time users save 15% on applicable products!

Here's a few other variants or sibling products that are worth considering:

And of course – you can always sign-up to be a DCR Supporter! That gets you an ad-free DCR, access to the DCR Quarantine Corner video series packed with behind the scenes tidbits...and it also makes you awesome. And being awesome is what it’s all about!

Thanks for reading! And as always, feel free to post comments or questions in the comments section below, I’ll be happy to try and answer them as quickly as possible. And lastly, if you felt this review was useful – I always appreciate feedback in the comments below. Thanks!

Hopefully you found this review useful. At the end of the day, I’m an athlete just like you looking for the most detail possible on a new purchase – so my review is written from the standpoint of how I used the device. The reviews generally take a lot of hours to put together, so it’s a fair bit of work (and labor of love). As you probably noticed by looking below, I also take time to answer all the questions posted in the comments – and there’s quite a bit of detail in there as well.

If you're shopping for the Apple Watch Ultra (Alpine Loop Orange) or any other accessory items, please consider using the affiliate links below! As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. It doesn’t cost you anything extra, but your purchases help support this website a lot. Even more, if you use Backcountry.com or Competitive Cyclist with coupon code DCRAINMAKER, first time users save 15% on applicable products!

Here's a few other variants or sibling products that are worth considering:

And of course – you can always sign-up to be a DCR Supporter! That gets you an ad-free DCR, access to the DCR Quarantine Corner video series packed with behind the scenes tidbits...and it also makes you awesome. And being awesome is what it’s all about!

Thanks for reading! And as always, feel free to post comments or questions in the comments section below, I’ll be happy to try and answer them as quickly as possible. And lastly, if you felt this review was useful – I always appreciate feedback in the comments below. Thanks!

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Any comments or recommendations on the Ultra band choices? I’m trying to choose between the Alpine Loop or the Trail Loop band?

Yup, I’ll add in a more detailed band-choosing section here shortly.

However, till then…on launch day I tried a bunch of bands out at Apple, and came away loving the Alpine Loop in terms of looks, but found it frustrating to get on/off. But, what I didn’t realize at the time (since the keynote had just ended moments earlier), was that there were multiple size bands, and I’m pretty sure I had tried a small band, not the larger band I have now.

So, I really like it, and while it’s still a little bit finicky to remove/put on, it’s definitely far easier with the correct size. Plus, you’re likely only taking it off every other day, so it’s not as bad as daily (or, a gazillion times at a hands-on area).

The trail loop is great too. It’s what I have on my wrist right now. It’s much quicker to get off than the Alpine, and you get a bit more specificity when it comes to exactly how you adjust it, since there’s no ‘preset’ spots like the Alpine loop. But I wouldn’t overthink that part as much.

I ordered the Trail Loop on launch day, but, I might end up ordering a second Alpine Loop band at some point. Though, I’ll cry softly into a pillow afterwards on behalf of my wallet for doing so…

If I had to do it all over again, I’d probably go Alpine Loop instead.

Does it struggle to capture heart rate early into the run? I’ve had this issue with recent series of Apple Watch on literally every single run. See the attached file.

Separately, how does one pair a heart rate monitor to the watch and then have the monitor HR data broadcast over the watch while completing a run and also have that HR data be the data that Strava picks up? This question is inherently tied to my first question so I guess if there an answer / solution to the first question, this question is irrelevant.

I use a Garmin HRM-Pro with my Apple Watch Series 7; it’s paired via Bluetooth. I put it on before my workouts, go into Bluetooth on the AW to connect it (it doesn’t appear to be automatic, sadly), and then do my workout. Data is pulled into Strava/TP/GC without issue (either with direct sync or something like HealthFit).

1) No initial struggles – but that’s actually what the Precision Start aims to fix. Meaning, now it waits and acquires HR/GPS first, and then you press start to go – thus, you’ve got proper lock. Otherwise, with the 3-2-1 countdown, it doesn’t start lock till after you’ve started running/whatever, which is the worst possible way to get HR/GPS lock (and gets you the chart you have above).

2) Connecting to a HR strap is easy via the Bluetooth menu – I think I show a picture of it up above in the Sports section. As John noted, with the Strava app itself, it’ll pull the data in automatically.

Is it feasible that Apple could add mapping support in a firmware upgrade? My gut feels me this might be something they are reserving for v. 2.0 but curious all the same.

Totally feasible, and likely expected.

In the meantime you can use Komoot or AllTrails to do mapping.

I purchased WorkOutdoors but the UI is very unintuitive for me. So back to AllTrails in the US and Komoot elsewhere.

Any chance the multisport workout upload to Strava well be fixed so it can show three disciplines instead of a single generic workout? Is that on the Apple side or the Strava side? I never noticed an issue with my Garmin.

I’m curious if using HealthFit for import to Strava/TP rather than the native Strava import process will resolve this issue, considering that HealthFit to Strava pulls in running dynamics where native sync does not.

I might try a dummy multisport activity on my AW7 later and see how that works now that WatchOS 9 is out in the wild.

Hmm, that’s a good question. When I tried it this summer, I used HealthFit, and it pulled it in cleanly. I don’t typically use the native Strava import option.

Just downloaded HealthFit and re-uploaded my Tri. Everything but the swim imported properly. The swim is missing. I’ll have to try it again with another multisport workout (maybe a swim-run) and see if I have the same issue.

I wouldn’t complain at all if Apple added support for BT power meters, but like probably everyone that has a power meter I also have a cycling computer. So I fail to understand why it’s a big deal.

TBH, I’d much rather see support for Varia radars. I’m confident that Apple could make haptic notifications work really well for radar alerts. They already do that for turn by turn directions from Maps.

For pure cyclists, I largely agree that most (well, virtually all) with power meters would have bike computers.

However, for triathlon, you really want one cohesive record in the triathlon file – even if you also use a separate bike computer during the race and training (as many do).

I agree 100%. I’m a triathlete and use my ambit3 for swimming/running and a wahoo for the bike. I have not replaced my ambit3 because it still works and i feel bad when replacing something still usable. This watch is the first one that made me think about a new watch being able to import training peaks workouts to the native app would be an amazing addition.

Would adding BL/BLE sensors be a FW/SW upgrade or would it require new hardware? Trying to decide if I should wait for Ultra v2 or just hope for inclusion in a WatchOS patch?

There are already third-party apps that support BT sensors, so no hardware changes are required.

If the Fenix 6 or 7 incorporated ECG…I would agree with you. But they do not AFAIK. I would like only one watch and if the 8Ultra incorporates the power meter…I only have to use one device.

I’m really looking forward to getting mine. While it lacks routable topo maps and the insane battery life of my Fenix 7X, it has cellular, a far better daily use experience for music and life in general, and will, I suspect, be a lot more comfortable to sleep with. I’ll keep the Fenix for a while, and although I’m aiming for a 100km run that the Ultra *might* just about last through, I suspect I’ll eventually offload it and stick with Apple. It’s just easier.

This. I’ll be selling my Forerunner 955 to make way for the Ultra in a couple weeks. The longest activity I do (once a year) is a backcountry day hike in Yellowstone that tops out at eight hours round trip. This should easily handle that. Otherwise, my longest run is a marathon (four hours) and my longest multisport event is a sprint (1.5 hours if I’m tired).

Excited to have my “it just works” functionality and Apple Health data collate seamlessly.

yep. i’d rather have a better overall user experience than 30 days of battery life..

Thanks for being a DCR Supporter, Dave!

I have been reading your comments here for a long time as you look a very reasonable user that makes very good points on all discussions you take part in, so I eagerly expect your opinions on how good this watch with a third party app is for activities linked to routable maps.

“And the bands? Those are an eye-watering 99€ each.” But older bands for previous Apple Watches still work, right?

Yes, per the Apple site the 45mm bands work with the Ultra:

“You can match most bands with any Apple Watch Series 3 or newer case of the same size. The 41mm bands work with 38mm and 40mm cases; the 45mm bands work with 42mm, 44mm and 49mm cases.”

Navigation is critical. I am constantly creating new routes to add variety to my workouts, and I use navigation on my Garmin to follow route.

The Ultra looks amazing but choosing it for workouts over its competitors means:

1. Not able to do structured workouts from TrainingPeaks 2. Limited sensor support and connections. Its either connecting AW with Stryd or Zwift with Stryd. That’s a deal breaker when doing workouts indoors as you have to choose either accuracy (by connecting Stryd to AW) or a perfectly prescribed workout (connecting Stryd to Zwift). 3. Unintentional pausing of a workout on the AW as the touchscreen is sensitive to sweat. Locking and unlocking the screen is a faff especially if using multiple apps or listening to music or podcasts. 4. Third party app stability especially when it comes to syncing workouts or running in parallel with other apps. Ive had plenty of mid-workout reboots from Peloton, Zwift and Stryd AW apps.

I was hoping the Ultra would address the above issues I’ve had with other AWs. It remains a really good smart watch. Personally, I can’t make the most of my workouts using the Ultra.

Imagine if TrainingPeaks made a high-quality app for the watch that took their workouts, connected to power meters etc. They would get a lot more people too.

Number 3: I’ve even managed to end a workout on more than one occasion peeling back a wet sleeve in the rain, and there’s (still) no resume button so that’s that.

To Ray’s point, a lot of the ‘gaps’ can be closed by software updates or more capable 3rd party apps to your point. But I feel Apple should do more natively especially through broader sensor support and re-broadcasting sensor inputs if they insist on shying away from Ant+. Apple should aim to reduce the need to shuffle between apps especially while running downhill on a trail (I cracked more than the screen).

this. training peaks looks ancient in terms of UI and honestly, too much useless data. they can turn things around, but i doubt they will.

Hey Ray, you seem to have the same picture twice when showing the new Action button – both pictures are of the crown + button on the right hand side of the watch.

Hey Ray, Long time follower here. Thanks again for all your reviews to help guide us with new devices and technology. Just want to clarify if the new action button can start and stop the timer swimming laps in the pool as past Apple watches we’re horrible at this. Thank you! Dino

Yup, in a Pool Swim, the action button by itself, once started, acts as a stop-timer (pause). However, somewhat oddly, it doesn’t (by itself) resume the timer. For that, you have to press both Action + Lower right button.

You can also pause the timer by pressing the two right buttons together, as previous.

Great. Thanks. Would this be the same action you would have to take to pause a run? Push both buttons?

In run, pressing the Action + Bottom right button will pause the run, whereas just pressing Action only, will mark a lap.

I’m long time Garmin watches user (10+ years), now on Epix 2. I would switch to Apple Watch Ultra immediately, what stops me from it is that I do not want to prison myself in Apple “walled garden” ecosystem. Sadly – there is no equivalent in Android world to Apple Watch Ultra (I do not think Samsung Watch 5 Pro is). I’m having high hopes that maybe Sunnto will release successor to Sunnto 7, presumably based on Snapdragon W5+, that will be solid smartwatch and solid adventure/sports watch at the same time.

What part of the ecosystem are you afraid will be walled? Lots of friends have iPhones and use none of the apple apps. They sold their androids and kept all their google type accounts (mail, photos, docs, spotify, etc) I genuinely think the days of the walled garden are mostly behind us. Unless you are referring to google cal syncing web links…

Apple’s strength lies in its ecosystem. If you don’t use their other devices, then there’s no need to buy an iPhone. There are better phones out there but Android does not offer coherent experience across different devices.

Well, if I switch to iPhone, and acquire Apple Watch Ultra as well, for any future phone upgrade my choices will narrow to only one vendor – which is Apple. With other watches – I can choose basically any vendor/model I want. Also – iPhones are deliberately made to work well with Apple computers (and other part of ecosystem) only. Currently I’m on Windows when it comes for personal and business machines. I like my Epix 2 a lot, but as smartwatch it sucks. As said above – switching to Apple Watch Ultra is very tempting – but given the fact that it basically forces you to enter the walled garden – I will not go there (hey, I know that this garden is really nice, I just hate the high walls that separates this from outside world 🙂 I gave up my hopes that Garmin will improve in “smartwatch side” – looking (from a distance) at their software development process – it is not going to happen.

Actually Apple Watch Ultra may force Garmin to make Epix/Fenix a better smartwatch with LTE connectivity microphones and speakers. But they would do it with Android in mind because Apple doesn’t let them use its full potential. And from what I heard, the majority of Garmin clients are iPhone users.

Well, the competition is always good thing for customers 🙂

You might still be able to find one of the Garmin smartphones

How l long ago was the Garmin phone? I don’t think I ever heard of them. (What, no quarter turn mount?)

What it seems you are saying is that you would rather have an inferior experience because you are afraid that you will like the Apple experience too much. Apple does not hold your data hostage, nor does it do anything to lock you in to their ecosystem, other than provide a great experience. There are certainly people who switch back and forth between the ecosystems, but there are fewer and fewer of them, not because Apple has raised barriers, but because many people feel there is no competitor ecosystem that offers as much.

One can take all one’s data out of HealthKit, but I do not know of a system that synchronizes with as many Electronic Medical Records systems in the U.S., so switching would mean giving that up. It would not be Apple locking you in, but competitors not offering the same level of functionality.

Many third party apps and services work on both platforms, but work much better on iOS/iPadOS/macOS/tvOS/watchOS, moving would decrease the quality of the app. Again, not Apple’s fault, just that Apple provides an easier developer experience (fewer variants and more customers willing to pay for apps and services).

Of what exactly are you afraid? That you will have too good an experience and then not want to leave? That does not seem like a rational fear. 🙂

This is re: Alan Wynn. I do not want to go into lengthy discussion on Apple vs non-Apple consumer/IT product – in the end of the day – this article is on Apple Watch Ultra – not Apple ecosystems. Anyway – contrary to yourself I actually consider that Apple does a lot to keep you in their eco-system of products – not just by doing quality products. Nevertheless – I need to be honest and admit – I’m tempted, however it does kind of feel like being tempted by The Dark Side 😉 One other factor is that Apple iPhones (so something mandatory to have to use Apple Watch) is obviously extremely expensive. I do not live in US, I live in country with way lower average income, still the Apple products are more expensive here than in US.

Couple of years ago I was tempted myself but after using my sister’s AW for a one day I ran back to Garmin. So many things that are obvious here just aren’t there or work awkwardly (no Continue Later option, no default Backtrack, no constant HR measurement, no button navigation, 10 different apps for different things etc). Then again I’m not a person who likes to use smartwatch features. Even my Fenix has Bluetooth mostly off and I sync via WiFi after an activity. The only thing I would like to have is LTE connectivity to stay connected during a run without a phone. Other than that I don’t need my watch to constantly vibrate, light up and drain battery. My dream watch would be an analog Garmin Fenix with AMOLED display that lights up only when I need it. Most of the time I would actually prefer to glance at analog watch face with mechanical hands. But I’m almost 40 and slowly getting tired off screens all over the place. I even had to look for a car with analog speed indicator 😉

This. I have to believe we will see an Epix 3 with LTE, microphone, speakers, and basic dive app in very short order and all for $799. Garmin had to see this coming. They better up their game quickly which means eliminating half their watches that simply overlap, quit crippling watches with the same hardware for a price point, and lower their prices on their top tiers. Garmin has been told to do many of these things for years from Ray and others. I have to assume they’ll listen now that Apple has forced them to.

Hi Ray, wonderful review, thank you!

Do you think it will last a day alpine skiing and tracking with the Skitracking feature? I tried that with my Watch 5 and this was not possible. I mean starting 9 am to about 4 pm?

As I said on the Youtube video, the only thing preventing me right now to migrate to Apple Watch Ultra is the mandatory use of an iPhone, if they allowed to pair it to an iPad I would bought both devices.

Can Zwift “see” Apple Watch pace info, like it can with Garmin? I do all my treadmill runs with Zwift, and this is the main reason why I use a Garmin.

I think Apple have got to consider making their Health App available on other platforms, even if in a reduced version. I understand that the AW and some of the first-party Health metrics are tied to an iPhone, but Apple’s more and more taking aim at an audience of fitness data-junkies who want to analyse that data. Whilst the Health data (or its presentation) might not yet be as rich as that provided by the likes of Garmin Connect, I’d still want the option to be able to view it on my computer screen or iPad rather than have to flick through it on a 6″ phone screen.

The reason Health app data isn’t available on other platforms is the security/encryption. As maddening as it is to have to view it on our phones, it ensures that it’s secure and can’t be accessed anywhere else. I was hoping a web UI or even a desktop app would come with the next MacOS update, but that doesn’t appear to be in the cards.

I’d accept it being usable on even an iPad with a better interface. I hate looking for stuff in the health app.

Can you charge the watch during an activity?

Don’t know for sure with the Ultra but with Series 5 on OS9, I can start a workout (Apple) and attach to the charger. The workout pauses but can be restarted with no issues and runs. If connected to BT HR strap everything is recorded. The only problem is if the watch slips off the charger and then reattaches the workout pauses again. So you need to be careful but in principle it works fine. I don’t see why the Ultra would be different.

How does the AW Ultra perform at intervals? Is it accurate enough to show me the speed changes min/km so quickly and accurately that I no longer need a stryd or does this also work with the Ultra like it did with the other AW, only very slowly and imprecisely because of the GPS inaccuracies?

Yes, the lack of mapping, GPX import and navigation and athlete’s tools will be improved in future iterations.

But making the Ultra a true adventure watch might conflict with Apple’s design ethos. Every touch command can also be executed with a button on Garmin’s watches. A Fenix doesn’t have a problem with rain or gloves!

But there seem to be three things governed by physics: a beautiful display, power, and long battery life. You can’t have maximum scores in all three.

For years, I have used Fenixes and Tactixes (Tactii?) in military and mountain environments. A battery that can last for weeks is essential when you don’t have access to charging or a cell signal. Even if future iterations of the Ultra improve, it’s unlikely Apple will make the compromises necessary to deliver multi-week performance.

There’s lots of febrile chatter about how Apple will destroy Garmin. I don’t think it will. I suspect it’ll be more like smartphone cameras: smartphones killed off the casual use devices, but there’s a thriving market for pro and pro-am cameras. Garmin et al. might see a dent, but their watches will continue to have a place for people who want a different balance of functionality.

I agree that Apple or any other smart watch maker will not destroy Garmin. But the profit of both hardware production and software development is hugely linked to volume. Even if a small percentage of Garmins premium clock users move to Apple Watch it is going to hurt Garmin,

sounds like some fun adventures you are up to and thank you for these super nice reviews.

Do you have a comparison of the HR sensors across the Apple Watch Editions at hand? Would love to see how it evolved over time since there are claims that its actually different hardware. My AW 5 does well at avg HR but typically misses or lags on spikes/dips.

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Does Apple Watch have Continue Later option during activity?

Hi. Thank you for your work. This is incredibly useful.

I’m going to switch from a Garmin Forerunner 245 to the AWU. I don’t go further than a marathon and now that we can structure workouts on the watch I don’t see why not. I’m sick of bringing my phone with me on runs with my Garmin so I don’t miss messages (have kids) and can play my music. Curious to see if the watch can track a full day of skiing in cold temps this winter.

You seem to have Apple’s ear. Here is a field that could probably earn them a huge following quickly. GPS dog collars that seamlessly link with the Apple Watch. The offerings out there are terrible. Garmin of course has an epic satellite based system for serious hunting dogs (can track 20 dogs simultaneously via satellite for up to 10 miles on a topographical map interface) but costs 1k and doesn’t really even sync with the Fenix.

I like to run/bike with my dog and would like to be able to track them either on my phone or ideally on an AWU…. How about a dog collar that offers this functionality in the maybe $300 range? Have you ever considered reviewing the universe of dog collars?

Hi there, my sister, triathlete, and more than a dozen Ironman’s under her , sent me this web link….she’s a follower of your webpage so anyways she sent it to me because I’m considering purchasing the Apple ultra.

I currently have the Apple Watch six. I am a moderate hiker and I say moderate because it’s not a race it’s the journey and enjoying it so she told me ask him about purchasing the ultra if it only has three things that separate it from the Apple Watch eight is it worth the extra money?

So basically, I’m a hiker backpacker leisure person, so I do my hikes without any time limit heading down to South America one-way ticket doing the W then going over to the and some other stuff down there and that Sheila side and then going over to Argentinian Patagonia and doing some walking in Bariloche up in that you were so waterfall is also heading down to Ushuaia checking out the hikes there and then going to the Antarctic and doing some walking there so I do hope that you read me and give me your best suggestion . Thank you thank you thank you.

This was an excellent review because of its honesty. The key issue with the Apple Watch Ultra is WatchOS 9 which was not redesigned to be fully navigated using the new physical buttons or crown– it still relies upon touch or Siri. For sports applications (think: gloves, cold, rain, loud wind etc.) it doesn’t actually solve the very issue that prevented all other versions of the Apple Watch from being a viable option. And until there is a major evolution of WatchOS that allows it to be fully navigated with buttons, it’s little more than a rebodied Apple Watch 6/7/8 with the same limited compatibility/integrations and battery life. It’s a fine watch for the weekend Tough Mudder but not an “Ultra” adventure athlete.

A few things I wondered about before I get the watch. One, does the Ultra have something like a jacket mode? When I owned previous Apple Watches I always had to manually disable wrist detection to get the watch to stop locking itself if I wore it over top of a jacket. I also remember the watch occasionally having a problem with disabling a lock code or turning off wrist detection if you had a card loaded into the wallet app. In order to use Apple Pay you would always need to have a 4 digit lock code otherwise it would disable Apple Pay. I also wanted your preliminary thoughts on the raw titanium and if you are seeing any stretches that easily happen because of the raw titanium casing. Thanks as always for your review!

Well. This Just makes me want a Garmin Epix 😂

Hi, really useful review, thank you! I have a question: If I ride with a karo hammerhead 2 device and I bring my AWS Ultra (not starting any activity), when I finish my ride and I upload my activity with hammerhead to strava, will calories, rings etc be updated to AWS, replacing calories during the ride for karo data in the AWS? I will have duplicated calories data in my AWS?

Thank you in advance from Catalunya!

With regards to the Alpine Loop, how easy is it to wash after a sweaty run?! Currently using sports band on my AW7, just run under the tap and good as new! Interested in your thoughts, Cheers.

I’m of the same stature as The Girl. Did you hear whether they were considering developing a smaller version for petite people in a future iteration? Thanks so much!

Thanks for commenting on the touchscreen issue! In the rainy pacific nw, a touchscreen is pretty useless on long weekend runs. Garmin physical buttons are no-headache. Hopefully Apple can fix the touchscreen during workout issues with a software update.

Great review and Youtube post. Has there been any improvement to the touchscreen as far as being functional with wet or sweaty hands? I had hoped since this watch was targeting outdoor activity specifically, that it might do better than the previous models. Either I missed that somehow in the review or they haven’t improved it. Surely they would be bragging about any upgrades to that, and you would have tested it.

I’m stuck in that I am not willing to give up my Apple Watch for general life use, but it becomes next to worthless for me on a swim, bike, or run (at least in Texas where every workout results in sweaty hands) so I have to double up and wear a Garmin for workouts.

This is what my wife and I do: AW for all-day wear, strap on a Garmin Forerunner 745 (her) and 955 (me) as well for workouts/racing. Seems silly to wear two watches, but I’m still not at the “one device to rule them all”. My Ultra comes in a couple weeks, and I’d like to go with one device…but I’ve been using Garmin watches since 2006 without issue. Change is hard! 😀

RE: GPS accuracy. If I understand this article correctly not all GPS satellites are L5 ready. So I assume L5 availability (and watch accuracy) would differ depending on what is above you head at any particular time of day? link to zdnet.com

Is there any way of showing the actual temperature of the external temp sensor? I know it shows the water temp in dive mode but would be great to see the temp for non-dive activities (eg: Norway in Winter).

Where are you wearing it in Norway in winter? The problem with watches is that they’re near a heat source all the time if worn on the wrist. Even if you wear it outside clothing, there’s some effect. That’s why Garmin made the Tempe for the original Fenix. Maybe Apple can do something algorithmically with twin sensors to correct, but I doubt it.

It’s really odd that they didn’t add a native offline maps / navigation app. I’d be interested in a comparison of all the leading 3rd party nav apps for the Ultra.

My workflow is creating routes in komoot, which automatically syncs to garmin connect, which I can sync to my fenix watch. Finished activities then get automatically synced to Strava and imported in some other apps like statshunters. If I can find a good way to mimic that workflow I might get an Ultra.

Really thorough review considering the short amount of time you had before launch. You’ve done a lot of hiking this year for sure. Well done! I always appreciate your balanced reviews.

Apple has reached a certain saturation level of iPhone sales in certain countries.. When you couple saturation with minor increments in each new generation of iPhone, you have to imagine that Apple is looking to grow other product lines.

Apple sees up to $1K pricing for Garmin high end devices and imagines how that would scale for them with a customer base that is easily dropping $1k for Pro / Pro Max iPhones. So Apple is seeing the margins and pricing Garmin has hit and made some tentative steps. This is Apple’s way. Start with a few changes at a time. It’s a long term approach. But as you pointed out, Apple tends to update features over a long period of time. So as they make improvements, first generation Apple Watch Ultra owners will benefit too.

I sold my epix for the ultra. And it was the best decision I made. A heart rate sensor which is accurate. Crazy. The Garmin ones are crap. The gps is the best I’ve seen. And! I can finally leave my phone at home. Apple Pay (garmin one is more a joke). LTE is great 👍

Love your dedication to detail, Thanks for much clearer picture,

Great review, and I agree with your assessment that pretty much all the major shortcomings you pointed out can be fixed via a software update.

Is there any chance of an Oreo / rolling pin comparison photo? It’s hard to tell how this sizes up compared to a ‘standard’ Garmin etc

Regrettably, I don’t have any Oreos at the DCR Cave at the moment. So here’s a paprika instead. Hope its suitable.

Hey folks! Just a quick note that I’ve dropped a giant detailed comparison of the different Apple Watch strap/band types here: link to dcrainmaker.com

@Ray – the trick I use to lock my watch and avoid accidental input while doing long runs (or any exercise really) is to swipe over and turn on turn on the Water Lock feature. Then you have to hold the crown (in iOS 16) to do any further input. Note that you are still able to still scroll through the multiple screens of data though.

Not a full fix to your ask for the confirmation to end a workout, but a temporary band aid at least.

Yeah, that’s what I used the entire time for the hike. The problem was that anytime I needed to interact with the watch beyond just changing workout screens, I had to unlock it.

In my case, I apparently had the auto-end workout reminder thingy on, so I had to unlock to clear that, and then re-lock. And that showed up about 2-4 times an hour (times 14 hours). I’ve since disabled it, but I was also lucky in that I was out of cell phone range, so didn’t have to deal with dismissing/etc notifications too.

Figured you’d be all over that already 🙂

I hadn’t thought to also turn off the auto-end reminders. Going to have to do that myself. Thanks for the tip!

Does the Apple Watch Ultra work with Zwift Running on a dumb Treadmill?

You mention that having a regular AW and the ultra is 100% a reviewer problem but, actually, my question revolves around this. I have an existing AW (Series 7) and the Ultra just arrived. The Ultra seems pretty big but would be useful on my bigger adventures. I’m wondering if I can use both of them? I know that the iPhone supports multiple AWs but I’m not certain how the cellular plan works. Would I need two cellular plans? I’m assuming you had to set this up for the review process? How did it work? Did you have to add an additional cellular plan for your 2nd AW? Thanks.

I’m in the same boat. I don’t have the Ultra yet (arriving later today), but

a) It is definitely possible to use two watches. I currently have a S7 for daily wear and an old SE for sleeping (and letting my S7 charge). Switching between them is seamless and automatic; literallly all you do is take one off and put the other on (and unlock it). But the SE has no cellular.

b) It is also possible to have two cellular watches, provided your carrier supports it. I’ll find out this afternoon if T-Mobile does. Most carriers will require an additional device activation ($10/month in the case of T-Mobile) for the second watch.

c) In the worst case, it is possible to use the Ultra without activating cellular. This obviously does result in loss of functionality, but I figure it’s no worse than running with a Garmin/Coros/Polar/Suunto/etc.

I swim, bike and run. Then, I come here and write about my adventures. It’s as simple as that. Most of the time. If you’re new around these parts, here’s the long version of my story.

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You probably stumbled upon here looking for a review of a sports gadget.  If you’re trying to decide which unit to buy – check out my in-depth reviews section.  Some reviews are over 60 pages long when printed out, with hundreds of photos!  I aim to leave no stone unturned.

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