Garmin fenix® 6 Pro & Sapphire | Multisport Fitness Watch
fēnix® 6 Pro & Sapphire is a multisport fitness watch with music, Pulse Ox & Dynamic PacePro, a feature that helps you run smarter over various types of terrain.
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PACE YOURSELF TO HIGHER PERFORMANCE
These rugged fēnix multisport GPS watches let you add mapping, music, intelligent pace planning and more to your workouts — so you can take any challenge in stride.
It’s your body. Know it better with wrist-based heart rate1 and Pulse Ox2.
Don’t just run harder. Run smarter with grade-adjusted pacing guidance.
Ski bums, rejoice. Check out preloaded maps for 2,000 resorts.
Run and ride. It’s what you do. Tracking all your stats — it’s what we do.
Why bring your phone when you can sync music from your streaming services.
Battery life doesn’t limit you. Get up to 14 days between charges in smartwatch mode.
QUALITY BY DESIGN
The rugged yet sophisticated design features an always-on 1.3” display that’s 18% larger than previous fēnix models. It is tested to U.S. military standards for thermal, shock and water resistance.
PREMIUM MATERIALS
Fit the look to your lifestyle with your choice of stainless steel, titanium or DLC coated bezels. Each Sapphire edition adds a scratch-resistant sapphire lens and premium materials.
Additional information
PHYSICAL SIZE | 47 x 47 x 14.7 mm Fits wrists with the following circumference: |
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6 (six) is the natural number following 5 and preceding 7. It is a composite number and the smallest perfect number.
Fenix, Fénix (Spanish and Portuguese) and Fênix (Brazilian Portuguese) all mean phoenix and may refer to:
Fitness may refer to:
- Physical fitness, a state of health and well-being of the body
- Fitness culture, a sociocultural phenomenon surrounding exercise and physical fitness
- Fitness (biology), an individual's ability to propagate its genes
- Fitness (cereal), a brand of breakfast cereals and granola bars
- Fitness (magazine), a women's magazine, focusing on health and exercise
- Fitness and figure competition, a form of physique training, related to bodybuilding
- Fitness approximation, a method of function optimization evolutionary computation or artificial evolution methodologies
- Fitness function, a particular type of objective function in mathematics and computer science
- "Fitness", a 2018 song by Lizzo
Garmin Ltd. is an American multinational technology company based in Olathe, Kansas. The company designs, develops, manufactures, markets, and distributes GPS-enabled products and other navigation, communication, sensor-based, and information products to the automotive, aviation, marine, outdoors, and sport markets.
Garmin was founded in 1989 by Gary Burrell and Min Kao in Lenexa, Kansas. In 1996, the company established corporate headquarters in Olathe, Kansas. Since 2010, the company has been legally incorporated in Schaffhausen, Switzerland, with principal subsidiaries located in the United States, Taiwan, and the United Kingdom.
As of 2023, the company has over 20,000 employees in 34 countries with an operating income of 5.23 billion USD. Garmin was initially associated with personal in-car navigation devices, but now offers several product lines across different markets, with an emphasis on smartwatch technology. In 2022, Garmin smartwatches represented the largest market share of the premium smartwatch market (watches greater than $500), leading to it having the fifth largest share of overall smartwatches sold and the third by revenue.
As of February 2023, Garmin has shipped more than 282 million products worldwide.
Multisport may refer to:
- Multi-purpose stadium, where different sports are played
- Multi-sport clubs, which compete in several sports
- Multi-sport event, such as the Olympic Games
- Multisport race, such as a triathlon
- Multisport video game
Pro is an abbreviation meaning "professional".
Pro, PRO or variants thereof might also refer to:
Sapphire is a precious gemstone, a variety of the mineral corundum, consisting of aluminium oxide (α-Al2O3) with trace amounts of elements such as iron, titanium, cobalt, lead, chromium, vanadium, magnesium, boron, and silicon. The name sapphire is derived from the Latin word sapphirus, itself from the Greek word sappheiros (σάπφειρος), which referred to lapis lazuli. It is typically blue, but natural "fancy" sapphires also occur in yellow, purple, orange, and green colors; "parti sapphires" show two or more colors. Red corundum stones also occur, but are called rubies rather than sapphires. Pink-colored corundum may be classified either as ruby or sapphire depending on the locale. Commonly, natural sapphires are cut and polished into gemstones and worn in jewelry. They also may be created synthetically in laboratories for industrial or decorative purposes in large crystal boules. Because of the remarkable hardness of sapphires – 9 on the Mohs scale (the third-hardest mineral, after diamond at 10 and moissanite at 9.5) – sapphires are also used in some non-ornamental applications, such as infrared optical components, high-durability windows, wristwatch crystals and movement bearings, and very thin electronic wafers, which are used as the insulating substrates of special-purpose solid-state electronics such as integrated circuits and GaN-based blue LEDs. Sapphire is the birthstone for September and the gem of the 45th anniversary. A sapphire jubilee occurs after 65 years.
A watch is a timepiece carried or worn by a person. It is designed to keep a consistent movement despite the motions caused by the person's activities. A wristwatch is designed to be worn around the wrist, attached by a watch strap or other type of bracelet, including metal bands or leather straps. A pocket watch is carried in a pocket, often attached to a chain. A stopwatch is a watch that measures intervals of time.
During most of their history, beginning in the 16th century, watches were mechanical devices, driven by clockwork, powered by winding a mainspring, and keeping time with an oscillating balance wheel. These are called mechanical watches. In the 1960s the electronic quartz watch was invented, powered by a battery and keeping time with a vibrating quartz crystal. By the 1980s it took over most of the watch market, in what was called the quartz revolution (or the quartz crisis in Switzerland, whose renowned watch industry it decimated). In the 2010s, smartwatches emerged, small wrist-worn computers with touchscreens, with functions that go far beyond timekeeping.
Modern watches often display the day, date, month, and year. Mechanical watches may have extra features ("complications") such as moon-phase displays and different types of tourbillon. Quartz watches often include timers, chronographs, and alarm functions. Smartwatches and more complicated electronic watches may even incorporate calculators, GPS and Bluetooth technology or have heart-rate monitoring capabilities, and some use radio clock technology to regularly correct the time.
Most watches used mainly for timekeeping have quartz movements. But expensive collectible watches, valued more for their elaborate craftsmanship, aesthetic appeal, and glamorous design than for timekeeping, often have traditional mechanical movements, despite being less accurate and more expensive than their electronic counterparts. As of 2019, the most expensive watch ever sold at auction was the Patek Philippe Grandmaster Chime for US$31.2 million.
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