Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

Can I wear my Apple Watch while boxing/working out with a heavy bag (hitting it repeatedly)? Can it take the impact from the hits?

Can I wear my Apple Watch while boxing/working out with a heavy bag (hitting it repeatedly)? Can it take the impact from the hits?

Apple Watch

Posted on May 28, 2015 2:52 PM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on May 28, 2015 3:01 PM

I don't think any watch is intended for such use. I wouldn't wear mine. (But in your case, I've seen you hit, so it shouldn't really matter. 😁)

17 replies
Sort By: 

Aug 12, 2015 5:23 PM in response to Auwsome

😁 There are no hidden terms and conditions.


You can read the User Guide here: https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/apple-watch-user-guide/id985786488


or download it here: PDF Apple Watch User Guide


Under "Safety, Handling, and Support" the only precaution regarding "impact" addresses how its water resistance might be affected by such damage.

Reply

Aug 12, 2015 3:29 PM in response to Auwsome

Auwsome wrote:


So Apple has no position on this..........

If this were a $45 piece of schwag I could see the silent treatment, but not for an Apple Watch.


Apple does not participate on this site.


I seriously doubt boxing will hurt the Watch though. You are far more likely to hurt your own wrist by wearing it while boxing.

Reply

Aug 12, 2015 4:09 PM in response to John Galt

Well now I feel like a bit of an arse (should have known that they don't participate). I don't intend to wear it for sparring, just when I am doing 3 and 1's on the heavy bag. It will be covered by the gloves. I was just worried about screwing with the gyro-compass-interwebz wizardry inside that tiny little case.

Reply

Aug 12, 2015 4:57 PM in response to John Galt

Very true. Also I dug a bit and cannot find anything from Apple that says "...no heavy bag training..." or "...no combat sport training...". That said it could be under Section MMXLVII, Sub-Section 2,325.43B, Article 22r of their Terms and Conditions. I will run it past my contract attorney after I get back from the Cape.


http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1884035/

Reply

Aug 13, 2015 8:25 AM in response to Auwsome

The hardest part about wearing the watch with heavy bag training is that your hand wraps get in the way, that is what i have found out. I just take mine off when I am sparring or doing pad work. lifting weights is different, when it comes to that I just leave it on. Hope this helps!

Reply

Aug 13, 2015 11:58 AM in response to Auwsome

Since you do sparring and bag work, perhaps you would know of a wrist-wearable device containing a force transducer. It would at least provide a starting point to determine force due to acceleration for a typical punch. If you did, it would be possible to equate that to the force due to acceleration resulting from dropping the Watch onto a solid surface such as a wooden table.


I can't find any meaningful data on that subject, but it seems to me that dropping a Watch even a few centimeters onto a night stand would subject it to a greater force than you would hitting a bag with it strapped to your wrist. The Watch can move quite a bit while strapped to your arm, even if it were bound by tape and a glove, which means it won't decelerate nearly as fast as dropping it from a height so small no one would think twice about it.


The Watch has no shock resistance rating, no surprise since the only ISO standard that I know of only applies to mechanical watches. Casio's "G-Shock" series alleges survival from a 10m drop onto a "hard surface". If Casio advertises that force in engineering units I can't find it. I seriously doubt any Watch would survive a similar test without exterior damage though, and wrapping a Watch in protective material to preclude exterior damage would render any comparison invalid.


If you can tell me you hit a bag with x number of g as measured by some wrist-worn device, then I might be able to equate that to the force resulting from dropping a Watch from a height of y cm onto a tabletop. However, there will still be several unknown variables requiring reasonable assumptions to be made.

Reply

Jun 27, 2017 3:44 PM in response to avilacellphone

Not a heavy bag, but at 0:23 of Apple's own commercial the watch is worn while using a speed bag. Apple Watch Series 2 — Go Time - YouTube


I'd have the same concern about wrap being obnoxious with it, though. I would not have thought twice about the amount of impact it receives, but that has me curious now, just generally.

Reply

Can I wear my Apple Watch while boxing/working out with a heavy bag (hitting it repeatedly)? Can it take the impact from the hits?

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.