How to use Apple Watch support features for fitness
Your Apple Watch flags AFib with 71% sensitivity against standard ECG. That's good, but doesn't tell you what to do next. The same goes for training readiness: HRV drops can mean overreaching or just that you had coffee. Making sense of these alerts requires context. Dorsi provides that context, analyzing your wearable data alongside your training history and sleep. No green-yellow-red algorithms. Instead, it adapts your daily plan, whether you have 20 minutes or an hour. This page covers the key questions users ask about Apple Watch support: how to pair, what metrics matter, and when to trust the watch versus your own body.
Practical Playbook
How do I fix a no-sync workout?
When your Apple Watch fails to sync a workout to your phone, the fix is usually simpler than you think. Check both devices have Bluetooth on. Restart the app before restarting the watch. If that fails, unpair and re-pair the watch via the Watch app on iPhone. That resolves 80% of sync issues. Don't waste time on forums before trying these.
Calibrate your watch for accurate distances
The watch uses GPS and accelerometer for distance tracking. If your runs or walks show wonky distances, recalibrate: go to a flat outdoor track, open the Workout app, set to Outdoor Walk, and walk for 20 minutes at your normal pace. Repeat for Outdoor Run. This trains the stride model. Do it once a month if you see drift.
When should I replace the battery?
Batteries degrade over time. If your watch dies before midday or can't last through a 90-minute workout, it's time for a battery service. Apple charges $79 for most models. Check battery health in Settings > Battery > Battery Health. Below 80% capacity, replacement is worth it. Don't wait until it can't keep up with your training.
Common Mistakes
- Mistake
- Treating the 'close your rings' goal as a universal training prescription instead of a baseline activity target.
- Why
- The rings were designed to get sedentary people moving. Closing them doesn't mean you've trained for strength or endurance. Using ring completion to greenlight more work often leads to chronic fatigue or undertraining your real goal.
- Fix
- Treat the rings as a floor, not a ceiling. On strength days cap the move ring at 300-400 calories. Let your recovery metrics like HRV and resting heart rate decide if you should push harder, not a spinning circle.
- Mistake
- Relying on the calorie burn estimate from your watch for nutritional decisions.
- Why
- Studies show watch calorie counts can be off by 15-40% for weight training. Eating back those calories is a recipe for stalled fat loss or an accidental surplus.
- Fix
- If you must use the watch number, cut it by 30% for strength sessions. Better approach: track a rolling 7-day average of your weight and food log. That gives you real trend data, not a single session's guess.
- Mistake
- Checking HRV right after coffee and treating a low reading as a sign to skip training.
- Why
- Caffeine acutely suppresses HRV by 5-15 ms. You'll see a low recovery flag and unnecessarily bag a session that could have been fine.
- Fix
- Measure HRV first thing, before coffee, same time each morning. If you had caffeine before the reading, note it and ignore that day's recommendation. The watch can't tell you why the number dropped.
- Mistake
- Leaving auto-pause on during strength workouts in the Workout app.
- Why
- Auto-pause stops recording when you stop moving for a few seconds. In strength training you're either under tension or resting intentionally. The feature often misses entire sets or splits reps into random segments.
- Fix
- Disable auto-pause for strength workouts. Use the manual lap button to mark each set's start and end. You'll get accurate set durations and rest intervals, making your progress tracking actually useful.
From the Dorsi blog
Your Apple Watch HRV Number Is Wrong — Here's the 60-Second Fix
The HRV in your Health app is a misleading average of inconsistent daily readings. Learn the 60-second Breathe-app protocol that gives you a real training signa
Your Apple Watch Flagged AFib — How Worried Should You Be?
Apple Watch's irregular-rhythm notification catches most real AFib, but in healthy adults under 50, most alerts are false positives. Here's the Bayesian math.
Your Apple Watch Is Wrong About Your Deep Sleep — By How Much, and What to Trust Instead
Recent PSG studies show Apple Watch overestimates light sleep and underestimates deep sleep. Here's how much it's off and what to use for training decisions ins
Just show up. Dorsi handles the rest.
- HRV-driven readiness — today's plan adapts to how recovered you actually are.
- Adapts every session — no decision fatigue, no second-guessing your numbers.
- Apple Watch native — log a set with your wrist, not your phone.