⌚ Elevate Your Everyday with TicWatch Pro 5!
The TicWatch Pro 5 is a cutting-edge Android smartwatch featuring the Snapdragon W5+ Gen 1 platform, offering 80 hours of battery life, advanced health tracking, and a stylish, durable design. With 5ATM water resistance and a rotating crown for easy navigation, it's perfect for the active professional.
Compatible Phone Models | A Smartphone with Android 8.0 or later |
Compatible Devices | Smartphone |
Display Type | Ultra-Low Power Display |
Screen Size | 1.43 Inches |
Human-Interface Input | Touchscreen |
Clasp Type | Tang Buckle |
Supported Application | GPS |
Water Resistance Depth | 50 Meters |
Controller Type | Android |
Water Resistance Level | Water Resistant |
Sport Type | Walking |
Closure Type | Buckle |
Operating System | Snapdragon W5+Gen 1 Wearable Platform |
Additional Features | Heart Rate Monitor, Steps Tracker, Sleep Tracking, Calorie Tracker, Distance Tracker, Notifications, Smart Training: Recovery Time and VO2 MAX, Ultra-low-power Display, Upgraded 100+ Professional Sports Modes, Built-in GPS, Speaker and Mic, Barometer,Compass, New Fast Charging Technology |
GPS Geotagging Functionality | GPS+Beidou+Glonass+Galileo+QZSS |
Item Dimensions | 1.98 x 1.89 x 0.48 inches |
Item Weight | 44 Grams |
Band Width | 24 Millimeters |
Color | Sandstone |
Band Color | Sandstone |
Style Name | Modern |
Item Shape | Round |
Waterproof Rating | 5ATM |
RAM Memory Installed | 2 GB |
Memory Storage Capacity | 32 GB |
Communication Feature | [{'feature': 'Bluetooth'}, {'feature': 'GPS'}] |
Wireless Compability | Bluetooth |
Wireless Provider | Go Mobile |
Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth |
Battery Average Life | 80 Hours |
Battery Charge Time | 46 minutes |
Battery Cell Type | Lithium Ion |
Battery Capacity | 628 Milliamp Hours |
T**U
Ticwatch Pro 5 is a worthy successor to the Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra!
Mobvoi Ticwatch Pro 5 ReviewReview/comparison: The Mobvoi Ticwatch Pro 5 is my second Mobvoi Ticwatch; the first was a Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra.The feel of it: The Mobvoi Ticwatch Pro 5 seems very similar to my Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra in the size and the feeling of wearing it. The band feels comfortable and the watch body feels like it is the right size for a man's watch.Spec comparison: Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra vs Ticwatch Pro 5Ram: 1 Gb vs 2 Gb (Ticwatch Pro 5 should run faster)ROM: 8 Gb vs 32 Gb (Ticwatch Pro 5 should store more stuff)Battery: 577 mAh vs 628 mAh = 8.8% delta (Ticwatch Pro 5 should last longer)Size: 47.0 x 48.0 x 12.3 mm (Pro 3 Ultra) vs 50.1 x 48.0 x 12.2 mm (Pro 5)It looks like the Ticwatch Pro 5 is about the same size as the Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra except the Ticwatch Pro 5 has the crown that sticks out on the right side producing the 50.1 mm width.Weight: 41.0 grams vs 44.3 grams. Ticwatch Pro 5 weighs 8% more.Wrist band size: 22 m vs 24 mm. Why did Mobvoi change the band size? I have no idea.Finally a second color available! When I bought my Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra it was only available in black. Now the Mobvoi Ticwatch Pro 5 is available in black or a sandstone color.Sandstone and black strap: I was surprised the sandstone color really refers to the color of the watch band; not the watch body itself. The band has a black clasp that contrasts nicely with the sandstone strap. There is a sandstone strap keeper band that keeps the strap from flapping after the clasp and I wonder if that would have looked better if it was also black? There seem to be more holes on the band that are closer together and I am happy with the way that the band fits now. I always felt my old watch the holes were too far apart and I always felt like the band was either too tight or too loose.Gold body: The watch itself is mostly a muted gold color with a shiny gold strip around the bezel. I thought the watch would be sandstone color but it is really gold. The bezel face has a knurl pattern that catches and reflects light and looks fancy. I like the color but it surprised me because some of the Mobvoi photos on their website the watch body appears silver colored to me. Buyer beware that this watch body looks gold. That said I’m impressed how much cooler this watch looks than the all black color. With certain watch faces/colors it looks much more upscale.Color Update: My wife says the body doesn’t look gold to her. She says it looks like metallic sandstone and matches the band pretty well.Red crown stripe: I was surprised to see that the rotating crown also has a red accent on it. I wasn't expecting to see any red color on the watch.Screen: the screen looks slightly larger (old watch was 1.4 in 454x454 326 ppi, New watch 1.43 in 466x466 326 ppi) and brighter? But when using the always on display the screen auto dims too much when in sleep mode. My old watch would be about twice as bright in sleep mode. The screen seems more responsive than my old watch too. It is easier for me to push on screen buttons without accidentally pushing the wrong thing.Setting up the watch:The set up seemed easier without the separate WearOS app we used to have to install on our phones.I got a notification about Essential mode that couldn’t be dismissed. I had to at least go into Essential mode settings and look around. I found that I needed to adjust the start and stop times of the automatic essential mode to match my personal schedule versus the schedule set at the factory.App and OS updates: I needed to update 12 apps including Wear OS from within the Google Play store on the watch.Essential mode: The Essential mode screen that can save power is amazing! The Mobvoi website describes this as ‘Two watches in one’ and I agree; it does feel like you can transform the watch into a different watch! Sometimes I like the look of a basic LCD watch. It is much more visible in sunlight than the always-on display. I wish there was a way that I could have always on display on when I'm in a building but automatically switch to the essential mode display when I'm outside. I found myself switching this manually a lot on my old watch. I see that there is an automatic adaptive brightness setting so I know the watch has a light sensor. It would be nice if the sensor was reading daylight if it would switch to essential mode and when it senses less light switch back to the always-on display.Essential mode Use Case 1: Camping away from power sources but need time, date, long battery life, etc.Essential mode Use Case 2: Situations where I don't want it to look like I'm wearing a smartwatch or don’t want the distractions of a smartwatch.Essential mode now has…modes! Essential mode used to be just one screen with very little available data. Now Essential Mode has multiple screens of data that you can scroll through with the crown! Big improvement and much appreciated! The Mobvoi website says, “switchable tiles such as heart rate, blood oxygen, calories, and a compass.” This is actually pretty awesome that you view so much data in super low power mode.Tilt-to-wake: The twist your wrist to wake the screen seems much more responsive than my old watch. It works incredibly well and is very sensitive. I think it works perfectly and I kind of super love it.Giant settings shortcut menu: There are now 14 customizable icons in the new settings menu! I don't even know what they all do. My old watch only had 6 icons that couldn’t be changed.Rotating crown dial: The rotating crown really makes this watch so much nicer to navigate. The scrolling animations associated with the rotating crown are really smooth and look great.The app drawer: The circular app drawer with circular icons is gone and now replaced with pill shaped icons that scroll vertically. You can’t scroll around the bottom to the top; only up and down. It’s a little boring but it’s legible and it works.Recent apps (Top button): This seems like it is just the app drawer filtered by ‘recent’ instead of ‘alphabetical. So maybe a little redundant since pushing the crown button one time opens the alphabetical app drawer and double tapping the crown opens the most recently used app.Recent app (Double tap crown button): This seems like a good idea to be able to access the recent app so easily.Button change: The Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra had 2 buttons that looked like rotating crowns. The lower button would always get accidentally pressed when doing pushups so I'm glad that button is relocated. Will the new crown button get accidentally depressed when doing push ups insatead? I'm wondering if I will miss the ability to program one button to a favorite app? I used to have that button set to launch the Stocard app to show my planet fitness scan code since that works so much better and faster than the planet fitness app. It looks like it is technically possible to remap buttons by sideloading apps. https://github.com/TransitNow/wearos-btn-remap/Compass: The Ticwatch Pro 5 has a working compass. I went outside to avoid any possible interference and was easily able to calibrate the compass using the figure 8 motion shown on the watch screen. The compass is really neat and I’m sure I’ll use it from time to time. The Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra had a compass at the time of its release but by the time I bought the Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra the compass feature had been taken away never to return. Mobvoi said this was due to a conflict with Google software. I wonder if that kind of thing will happen again? Will the Ticwatch Pro 5 will lose its compass functionality over time?Facer app: I was surprised Facer let me install it and use my account on a second watch without disconnecting the first watch. Heart rate monitor seems to work better with Facer. My old watch didn't do a good job monitoring my heart rate and displaying that data when using the Facer app.Weather app: The Weather app and it’s Tile did not work on my watch when I first tried it. I tried ensuring location was set to on for both watch and phone, watch reboots, and other Google search solutions to no avail. I finally gave up and installed the Accuweather app. Accuweather asked several permissions questions and worked. This seems to have also healed the Google weather app because it now works as well. This also caused all the weather related data to show up on my Facer watch face.One Tap Measurement app: One tap health measurement is cool to watch. With one tap it measures heart rate, blood oxygen, respiratory rate and stress. If you want to add ‘Heart Health’ as a 5th metric as shown on the Mobvoi website launch the TicPulse app, scroll down to Heart Health and tap the ‘Measure’ button.Wear OS updates: The Ticwatch Pro 5 first shipped August 16th 2023 with Wear OS 3.5 (which was released October 2022). This means Mobvoi had Wear OS 3.5 for 10 months and couldn’t have the watch ready for Wear OS 4 (which came out July 2023, one month before the Ticwatch Pro 5 was released). The Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra was slated to get Wear OS 3 but it has not gotten it for over a year past when Mobvoi promised to release it. This makes me doubt that Mobvoi will be able to upgrade the operating system of this watch to Wear OS 4 in a reasonable time frame. Mobvoi user groups constantly complain about this and I am doubting that they will be happy with the update schedule for this new watch. If you demand timely Wear OS and security updates you would probably be better off with a Google Pixel Watch or a Samsung Galaxy watch.Google assistant or the lack thereof: The Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra came with Google Assistant as standard software. I was able to launch it using one of the buttons on the side of the watch and I could send texts or make phone calls or turn the lights on and off at my house using voice command. As time went by the ability to make phone calls or send texts was taken away and I could only use a limited set of Google Assistant commands. Even worse the Google Assistant was eventually removed completely and I could launch it but it no longer had any functions. Today when I launch Google Assistant it just says, “Google Assistant is not available for this version.” The Ticwatch Pro 5 does not have Google Assistant at all. I wonder if Google Assistant will be available again once the watch gets Wear OS 4? Some people have said they don't care if Google Assistant isn't available on the watch because they never used it but I really liked it and used it all the time. There is a youtube video where it is shown how to sideload Google Assistant. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lqnD2iWeQBIGoogle, Do no evil: Google has released its Pixel 1 watch and now it's Pixel 2 watch and all of the features ‘magically’ work; whereas they are ‘somehow’ blocked on other manufacturer’s watches. This is unfair to handicap other manufacturers and keep all of the best features for yourself. It is short-sighted for Google to behave this way and I'm sure companies like Mobvoi don't appreciate it. If Google wants Wear OS to grow and gain market share it needs to treat all its manufacturers equally and fairly.Soarking Charger 3 stand not compatible: The Ticwatch Pro 5 does charge on the Soarking charger 3 and the charging screen looks way better than the old one. It displays the charge in percentage with hundreds of a percent which is entertaining to watch. However, it seems the health sensor on the back of the Ticwatch Pro 5 is larger than the Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra and the new watch doesn’t fit on the charger stand very well. It doesn’t seat on the charger as well as the Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra did. Soarking has updated their charger stand design. It used to be called the ‘3 Charger stand’ but it is now called the ‘5/3’ charger stand. It looks like the cutout in the stand has been enlarged to fit the Ticwatch Pro 5.Pixel Buds Pro and Multi Point Technology: I connected my pixel Bud Pro headphones to this watch which worked well. Using the Pixel Buds Pro multi point technology should ease the transition from phone audio to watch audio. The Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra was a pain to switch headphone audio from phone to watch until I got the Pixel Buds Pro headphones and enabled multi point.Conclusions:Is it worth buying this watch versus a Google or Samsung watch? It depends how much that Essential mode LCD screen and the resultant extended battery life is worth to you in comparison to Google's Pixel Watch OS and Security updates because you are literally making that trade off when you purchase a watch from Mobvoi. Knowing yourself well enough to pick a smartwatch that has the features you need and will have use cases for helps to make this decision. I think this will be a great watch for me as long as updates come in a reasonable rate and features don’t start disappearing.Is the Ticwatch Pro 5 really an upgrade over Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra? With the additions of gmail, calendar, rotating crown, larger battery, more responsive screen, better looking Sandstone color, 2X RAM, 4X ROM, Wear OS 3.5, noticeably faster operation, faster battery charging, much improved Essential modes with multiple data modes, working compass, and less change of Google disabling features for the time being I think the Pro 5 is a tangible upgrade over the Pro 3 Ultra.You may need new watch bands and a new stand charger if you are upgrading from a Ticwatch Pro 3 Ultra since the older accessories may not be compatible.
T**H
3rd Time Does the Trick - Great Bang for Your Buck!
This is my 3rd TicWatch Pro, having had both the previous TWP 3 and TWP 3 Ultra, and I can say they keep getting better. Originally I chose it over the other smartwatches like Samsung or Fossil because it had the same, or better, specs at a better price. The first one (TWP 3) sadly died within 17 months, but I had a promotional 18-month warranty which they honored (good customer service) and they allowed me to get the 3 Ultra (for a small upgrade fee). They made some minor improvements of which I liked, but nothing too groundbreaking.With this TWP 5, when it came out, I was intrigued with Wear OS 3 and the promise of a better battery life. I think a classic complaint for any smartwatch is the battery life (no matter the brand), and since my TWP 3 Ultra was only lasting about 2 days without going into essential mode, I decided to give the TWP 5 a shot. I’ve had it for a few weeks now, and I can say, without a doubt, that TicWatch keeps getting better, and the upgrades of the 5 far outweigh the upgrades from the 3 to the 3 Ultra.I’ll list the PROs and CONs below and you can be the judge if it’s right for you.PROs:* While the interface is exactly the same, there's some new-ness that has improved with the upgrade to Wear OS 3. Like when you swipe down, there are more default options in there to access like settings, airplane mode, DND, flashlight, etc. There's like 14 options in there now. This just allows you to find something quicker. Also, the swipe right and left tiles (widgets) that you can customize have seemingly grown giving you more options allowing you to quickly get to a timer, workouts, weather, etc.* The battery life has vastly improved. The TWP5 does a better job and lasts at least a day longer than my previous TicWatches (so that’s like 50% more). They have added a new Smart Essential Mode feature allowing you to schedule it so it auto-switches your watch to Essential Mode when you’re sleeping, for instance. Essential Mode still tracks key things (steps, heart rate, etc.), but it's basically minimizing your watch to the bare necessities to save power. Plus there’s even additional settings you can play with to save more power as well. For example, it’s always monitoring (24/7) to see if you’re sleeping, but I was able to change that to only track at night time in order to conserve energy. I don’t nap so I didn’t need it to continually monitor if I was sleeping or not during the day, and so it allowed me to customize that. That’s just one example (among several others) of ways to preserve battery life. Overall it’s very clever.* With the upgraded Snapdragon processor and twice the RAM, it has a very quick reaction to everything - tapping, swiping, etc. - which you would expect in any smartwatch. My TWP 3 Ultra reacted well too, but I would notice things like tapping the watch to wake it up may not take right away. When I touched the screen, sometimes it wouldn't wake with a quick tap and I'd have to tap it again to wake it up. With the Pro 5 that doesn't happen anymore.* The Fast Charge Technology they boast is a real thing as charging has dramatically improved. Before I upgraded to the 5 I was testing the charge of the old watch and I was getting about a 1/2% (0.5) increase in battery for every minute I was charging. So if I needed to go up 30% in battery life, it would take at least an hour of charging (60 minutes). With the Pro 5, it's vastly different. Using the supplied charging wire it was going up about 2% every minute, so like 4 times as fast.* The Mobvoi Health App is better because it incorporates the Wear OS app now, so no need for both (more on that later in the CONs section). Also, I feel like its sleep tracking is more robust, giving you more insights than before. I always felt it didn’t compare with my old Fitbit and now it seems like it caught up. Also, when going through the health stats, there are a few new ones that they didn’t to track before, like blood oxygen and stairs climbed (at least I don’t remember seeing those in the old Mobvoi App).* The haptic vibrations are way better than before, and you can further customize the types of vibrations there are. This doesn’t sound like a big deal, but I use the vibrating alarm clock on the watch, and not having to wake up to the sound of an alarm is awesome. However with the TWP3 Ultra, the vibration was aggressive and loud enough to wake up my spouse when it went off in the morning. However, now, with the TWP5, they have softer vibration pulses that do the trick. This is a small detail, but one I appreciate.* One-tap Measurement. This is new and they now have the ability to click one button and it performs all the health monitoring in one fell swoop. In 90 seconds it says it will measure heart rate, blood oxygen, respiratory rate, stress and heart health. All of these also have options for continual monitoring, but it’s nice to have it all in one spot like this.* It now has a built-in Compass (TicCompass), Barometer/Altimeter measuring and even tracks floors climbed. Those are new and I enjoy that.* The new Rotating Crown is neat. You can control the watch face by touch, of course, but you can also scroll by rotating the crown instead. I don’t use it often, but it did come in handy when I was in the water and the screen wasn’t as reactive to touch. It’s not a deal breaker, but it’s a neat feature.* I don’t use a lot of watch faces, but they do incorporate a TimeShow app that has a bunch of watch faces and makes it easy to switch them. There are a bunch of “premium” ones, but I steer clear of those and just find free ones.CONS:* The TicWatch 5 no longer supports Google Assistant. I’m not sure if this will be a future update or not, but for now it’s not there. I thought this would be a bigger deal for me, but it turns out it’s not. I have that Assistant everywhere it seems. I have Google Home Minis (or Nest Minis), a couple Google TVs, Android Auto, and of course my Android phone, and so I have an Assistant pretty much anywhere I go. I never used the Assistant on my watch too much, so it’s not a big loss for me. I think others have talked to their watch to open an app, or start a workout, but it’s so easy to customize those things on this watch that I don’t think the work around will be too annoying. But still, if you liked having the Google Assistant on your watch, you won’t have it here.* The TWP 3 & Ultra used to have a customized button that you could add a specific action to it. I used it to put my flashlight on that button and found it very useful to quickly access it. That customized button is no longer here, however I can see the potential that an update can fix it. For example, when you double press the power button it takes you to Google Pay. The problem is, I don’t think there’s a way to change that action (or at least I haven’t figured it out yet). Furthermore, the crown button is another spot that maybe they’ll allow you to customize. For now, one press brings you to your apps, and a double press brings you to the last app you used. Perhaps one day they’ll update it so you can customize what opens up when you press the power button, or that crown button, twice. Either way, getting to the flashlight isn’t that hard. You can swipe down and click it, or you can customize a watch face to put it on there, so it’s not a huge deal, but I would still find the customization of double tapping one of those buttons to be useful.* Going from the 3 Ultra to the 5 was a bit confusing and they don’t explain it at all in the packaging. When I opened it up, it had a card within the packaging that asks you to scan the barcode with the Amazon app to see a video explaining it, but this wasn’t intuitive enough. Scanning took me to the watch’s Amazon product page and I didn’t quickly see this video, so I gave up. The thing is, apparently, the TWP 3 Ultra uses Wear OS 2 and so its Mobvoi app is only for watches that run Wear OS 2. With the TWP 5 it runs Wear OS 3 and you need the Mobvoi Health App (there’s a difference) instead. Furthermore, when I fired up the TWP 5, I went to my Wear OS Google app and much to my surprise it said it couldn’t find the watch. This was confusing and I had to do some research to figure it out. With the TWP 3 Ultra, I was able to go into my Wear OS app and adjust some watch settings and notifications and such, but now the Mobvoi Health App does all the Wear OS stuff. I don’t think this would have been confusing if I didn’t have previous TicWatches, but since I had to use both those apps with the 3 and 3 Ultra, it would have been better if they somehow explained that within the packaging. It was confusing.Overall this watch is great and I would recommend it over my past TicWatches. The PROs far outweigh what I consider to be minimal CONs. I enjoy the improvements of Wear OS 3, and the 50% better battery life & fast charging ability are game changers for me. While I haven't used other Android smartwatches, I did find after doing some online comparisons/research, that the TicWatch Pro 5 seems to stack up well and offers great bang for your buck. Hopefully this review will help you make a decision one way or the other.
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