I have just started running and am thinking of getting a distance monitor as I have no idea how far I am travelling are these any good and are they worth the money?
not necessary . Once you get used to running you'll know what pace you usually run at and so be able to judge distance that way. (so if you run a mile in 10 minutes, and run for an hour you know you've run about 6 miles)
I've got some routes measured from the car but anything off road is guesswork.As TR suggests re-assess the situation in a few months and see then if its necessary.
Just work on time spent running - easier to measure. If you want progress - then you cam always run route (A) and record the time, and see what you do next time.
Distance doesn't translate very well from one course to another - they are all so different.
Comments
Once you get used to running you'll know what pace you usually run at and so be able to judge distance that way.
(so if you run a mile in 10 minutes, and run for an hour you know you've run about 6 miles)
I've got some routes measured from the car but anything off road is guesswork.As TR suggests re-assess the situation in a few months and see then if its necessary.
If you want progress - then you cam always run route (A) and record the time, and see what you do next time.
Distance doesn't translate very well from one course to another - they are all so different.