Smart Sports Watches: Makibes F68 - Gadget Victims

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Smart Sports Watches: Makibes F68


The Makibes F68 is one of the cheapest Smart Watches available with a heart rate sensor.

I decided to try it just to see if it could be of any use in real life.


For me, the ideal budget sport watch does not exist yet, I mean, not below 100€ anyway.
None of them deserve to replace my favorite Citizen Eco-Drive Skyhawk, which is not smart but solar powered and nearly indestructible.

Some brands have interesting models like Polar A300, Withings Activité Pop, and even Casio introduced recently the very promising WSD-F10 (only 500$!).

My selection criteria are however not too unrealistic I think:
1. Heart Rate monitor and pedometer with some accuracy
2. Bluetooth 4.0, allowing interaction with standard fitness equipment and apps supporting BLE/Bluetooth Smart.
3. Battery life of one week
4. At least rated waterproof IP 67: this rating should allow to swim for a limited time in shallow water. (6.x = Dust resistant, x.7 = Immersion up to 1 m, of course IP68 is better)
5. Some way to sync the information with popular fitness apps (MyFitnessPal, Google Fit, ...)
6. Clock function
Not needed in my case: GPS, Phone module, Camera

...and so far, none of the available models I've seen can tick all the boxes. It's either the battery life too short, the absence of display, not being waterproof, or the ridiculous thickness of the watch, ...there's always something wrong!

Of course, I presume that such a cheap gadget won't meet all my expectations, but at least I wish it could fill the gap until the real thing comes out on the market. I have ordered another cheap watch, the Makibes JW018 (aka Aoluguya S12)  which will be reviewed soon after this one.

Let's see...

Makibes F68
Manufacturer website: http://www.cnmaxever.com/smart-watch/f68.html
The Makibes F68 Smart Sport Watch is available for 27€ at Gearbest. It is also found under a variety of brands and names like Aoluguya G7 (about twice the price).

Unpacking and first look:
The F68 has a neat packaging, and comes with a black and a blue wrist band. The watch is smaller and thinner than expected and actually looks more like a kid's watch. The wrist band is actually quite short, 22cm from the last hole of the strap to the base of the tang.



First use: easy to start
The watch can only be turned on by placing it on the charging base.

Setup is easy through the touch screen and the the "Quick Understand" notice is just needed for the QR code to the phone app.
Once the BT function is ON (padlock symbol unlocked on the watch), the pairing with the dedicated HPlus Watch app is straightforward.


Optoelectronic heart rate sensor: for indicative purpose only...
Compared to other devices (BT chest strap, Blood pressure monitor, smart scale, fitness equipment) the F68 generally rates a few beats higher and also sometimes records sudden false peaks to over 190 bpm which could be worrying for people using this gadget as a reference for their health condition. The watch has 2 HR modes, the sport mode is continuous and should be used only for the time of a specific sport session as it will eat the battery faster. The Healthy mode takes periodic readings and is for all-day report.
There is a pedometer, which can be sometimes very stubborn at not detecting steps...


Connectivity and app: feeling alone...
While the F68 is detected as a HR monitor by 3rd party apps, none of them is able to get the pulse from the watch.
Only the dedicated HPlus Watch is compatible with the watch. It is a good app -with rooms for improvement- but should be fine for most users. Regrettably, data cannot be exported or linked with other apps, like MapMyRunRuntastic PROEndomondo, and that's a show-stopper for me.






















Battery life: 7 days is optimistic
Expectedly, the watch does not last the 7 days advertised. With BT always on and the HR sensor used in Healthy mode, I reached a maximum of 3 days. The battery life could be stretched a bit more by not leaving BT on all the time. It is not necessary since watch can keep data in memory for up to 7 days.

Waterproof: yes, but...
The watch survived the swimming pool test and I believe it might be IP67 as advertised, but the touch sensitive screen reacts to the water which can cause settings changes and random functions activation.

Functions: clock and some more
The watch features a clock. It seems obvious but many sport watches just don't do that. Other functions like chronograph, vibrating alarm and message/call notification are working as expected. The sedentary reminder and the speed analysis have to be activated on the watch and didn't give convincing results for me: According to the watch, I sleep an average of 2-hours/night and I've been reminded to get up and walk while I was already running on a treadmill!

Conclusion:
This low cost watch has unachieved potential and the lack of compatibility with popular fitness apps is its weakest point. It remains a gadget rather than a real sport watch because of its average accuracy.
However, despite all the red dots below, it is an interesting entry level smart watch for the price (27€ at Gearbest). Note that an improved version is on the way as the F69.

Good: 
 Very affordable
 Complete set of functions
 Can be used without a smartphone
 Decent companion app, HPlus Watch.

Not so good:
 Not compatible with popular fitness apps. Can only be used with the dedicated app.
 Some bugs in the watch itself, like turning off BT sometimes restarts the watch
● HR sensor sometimes goes wild.
 Waterproof but touch screen reacts to water contact.
 Short wristband (about 23cm total length, watch included)
 Average battery life, 3 days rather than 7.

User Manual; click for full size

13 comments:

  1. That's amazingly low-cost, even for what it does against what it is supposed to.
    It's still very optimistic to expect to be able to squeeze all that technology into such a small space without so many compromises - but it's slowly happening.
    Does the app include any sleep pattern analysis, which presumably could be done via the motion sensor? Though from what you've said about how long it thinks you sleep that may not match reality.
    I wonder how ANT+ compares with BTLE in terms of power consumption?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Alastair, that watch is too basic and not accurate enough for sleep pattern tracking. It's really not more than a gadget but indeed a nice introduction to the world of sport watches (to decide if you'd really have a use for a real one). I just received the other Makibes JW018 (more like a sport band) and just began testing it. First good point: this one at least is compatible with all BTLE apps but I'll have to compare with a chest heart sensor for accuracy.
      Although they're conceptually similar, it seems that ANT+ is slightly more energy efficient , partly due to its smaller software stack. Unfortunately it's not the always best standard that wins and B(T)LE is growing in popularity as being a subset of BT4.0.

      Delete
    2. Hi bubbah, do you have a review for the JW018?

      Delete
  2. "Although they're conceptually similar" - not so sure about that. ANT+ is more of a networking specification, allowing devices to participate in a mesh of interconnection. The aim was to become ubiquitous in the smart sports equipment arena. And the technology can also be used for other classes of connected devices. It will be interesting to see how all this develops.

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  3. Hi,
    do you plan to review F69?
    I cannot find it in the manufacturers website.

    Thanks

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Probably not. I was tempted at first but it seems that they didn't resolve the touch screen problems in the water. The app has not been improved. And still no compatibility with other fitness apps.

      Delete
  4. OK, thanks. The lack of a decent app and the capability to export to other apps is my bigger draw back, I think I will not buy it then.

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  5. I just recently received my F69 which seems to be an F68 with background light. The step counter goes wild after a few hours of normal working. Even during sitting by the computer it counts hundreds of steps. :) After an 8 hour office work the counter showed more than 10,000 steps. I will send it back unless there is a software update that can fix it.

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  6. none of smart watch functions work, and the company doesn't bother to update the firmware. They might update a firmware and release it as F70. Very disappointed

    ReplyDelete
  7. Great review with pics thanks. Helped me to decide on something a bit better that can connect. Cheers

    ReplyDelete

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