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I think sometimes the sensors can get confused based on what your physical body is doing. Like when I ride my quad, I can't have crash detection on when I'm riding the quad, because I'm riding over like bumpy trails and rocks, and sometimes I'll come to like a quick stop if there's like a big rock in the path or something like that. And it'll detect crashes sometimes when there's no crashes, just from all the vibration and jerking around and stuff like that. So I can't have crash detection or fall detection on, because it'll sometimes try to call 911. I've noticed that a couple of times, like my watch will be up underneath my jacket sleeve, because I wear a heavy jacket that comes down and covers my wrists, and then usually I've got gloves on. So I've come across a couple of situations where I didn't even know it was going. I heard the alarm, and here it was about to call 911 if I didn't stop it. And the only reason I stopped it is because I heard that noise, but sometimes I don't even hear that noise over like the engine. I've got a helmet on, and I got lucky a couple of times that I managed to stop it in time. So I think that on a smooth road, driving in a car, crash detection is fine, because if you get a certain jerk, like a big old jolt, chances are you got in a crash. But on a quad, getting a big old jolt, that's normal. Like when you go down over a big rock or something. Because one of the places I ride, man, you're climbing up and down over boulders, like a mountain of boulders. And you're just kurchunking over every one of them, and it detects crashes. So I think it's probably a sensor thing, because when I'm laying perfectly still in the middle of the afternoon, it detects my sleep. It doesn't add it to my nighttime sleep. Now I do have a sleep time set from 9.45 PM to 8.45 AM, and any sleep that's detected during that time, it adds to my nighttime sleep total. But naps, even though it detects them, it doesn't add it to my overall sleep total for that day. So yeah, it's probably a sensor thing. V01U, KZ. Thanks, Russell.
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