Toby on Fitness Tech

Whoop 5.0 Garments Failed Grapplers

36 min · 7. juli 2026
episode Whoop 5.0 Garments Failed Grapplers cover

Description

Whoop sent out a garments survey, so Toby turns that into a broader real-world breakdown of whether Whoop still makes sense for grapplers and strength athletes. He explains why the older Whoop 4.0 underwear placement worked better for jiu-jitsu, what the new 5.0 puck changed, why the new setup tracks worse on the mat, and the spacer workaround he uses to keep older 4.0 garments usable. From there the episode expands into bicep straps, chest straps, manual workout entry, whether anyone should buy Whoop right now, and how Fitbit, Amazfit, Polar, and Garmin make the category much harder for Whoop. The back half moves into the bigger training-tech picture: heart-rate accuracy, recovery-score overreliance, Garmin's stronger gamification, and how Toby uses Aria with Whoop, Garmin, Eight Sleep, and Speediance data to avoid overtraining. Not medical, financial, or training advice. This is personal experience and commentary based on the devices and garments Toby has used. More from Toby: https://tobyonfitnesstech.com Chapters: 00:00 Whoop 5.0 Garments Need a Rethink 00:30 Why 4.0 Underwear Worked for BJJ 03:34 The 5.0 Puck Placement Problem 05:54 It Tracks Worse Too 08:55 The Spacer Trick That Saves 4.0 Gear 10:39 Why Bicep Straps Fail in Grappling 12:36 Chest Straps and Manual Entry Are Not It 15:02 Should You Buy Whoop Right Now? 16:36 Whoop 5.0 Made the Garments Worse 19:55 If Whoop Reverts, I Will Buy Again 21:11 Fitbit, Amazfit, Polar, and Garmin 24:46 Wearable Accuracy Is Better Than People Admit 29:12 AI Training Plans After Overtraining 31:55 Do Not Let Recovery Scores Stop You 34:27 Garmin Is Better for Gamification Tags: Whoop, Whoop 5.0, Whoop 4.0, Whoop garments, jiu jitsu, BJJ, grappling, wearable tech, fitness tracker, recovery score, Garmin, Fitbit, Amazfit, Polar, heart rate accuracy, strength training, fitness tech

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21 episodes

episode Whoop 5.0 Garments Failed Grapplers artwork

Whoop 5.0 Garments Failed Grapplers

Whoop sent out a garments survey, so Toby turns that into a broader real-world breakdown of whether Whoop still makes sense for grapplers and strength athletes. He explains why the older Whoop 4.0 underwear placement worked better for jiu-jitsu, what the new 5.0 puck changed, why the new setup tracks worse on the mat, and the spacer workaround he uses to keep older 4.0 garments usable. From there the episode expands into bicep straps, chest straps, manual workout entry, whether anyone should buy Whoop right now, and how Fitbit, Amazfit, Polar, and Garmin make the category much harder for Whoop. The back half moves into the bigger training-tech picture: heart-rate accuracy, recovery-score overreliance, Garmin's stronger gamification, and how Toby uses Aria with Whoop, Garmin, Eight Sleep, and Speediance data to avoid overtraining. Not medical, financial, or training advice. This is personal experience and commentary based on the devices and garments Toby has used. More from Toby: https://tobyonfitnesstech.com Chapters: 00:00 Whoop 5.0 Garments Need a Rethink 00:30 Why 4.0 Underwear Worked for BJJ 03:34 The 5.0 Puck Placement Problem 05:54 It Tracks Worse Too 08:55 The Spacer Trick That Saves 4.0 Gear 10:39 Why Bicep Straps Fail in Grappling 12:36 Chest Straps and Manual Entry Are Not It 15:02 Should You Buy Whoop Right Now? 16:36 Whoop 5.0 Made the Garments Worse 19:55 If Whoop Reverts, I Will Buy Again 21:11 Fitbit, Amazfit, Polar, and Garmin 24:46 Wearable Accuracy Is Better Than People Admit 29:12 AI Training Plans After Overtraining 31:55 Do Not Let Recovery Scores Stop You 34:27 Garmin Is Better for Gamification Tags: Whoop, Whoop 5.0, Whoop 4.0, Whoop garments, jiu jitsu, BJJ, grappling, wearable tech, fitness tracker, recovery score, Garmin, Fitbit, Amazfit, Polar, heart rate accuracy, strength training, fitness tech

7. juli 202636 min
episode AI Coding Agents Compared: Codex, Claude, MiniMax, Hermes and Antigravity artwork

AI Coding Agents Compared: Codex, Claude, MiniMax, Hermes and Antigravity

This is the full cleaned replay from my livestream comparing the AI coding agent and coding-harness landscape: Hermes Desktop, Claude Code, Codex, MiniMax Code, OpenClaw, and Antigravity.I talk through why harnesses matter, subscription limits, why I still use Claude Code from the command line, why Codex is one of the fastest and most polished apps for me right now, why MiniMax M3 surprised me on value, where Hermes and OpenClaw are strong or frustrating, and why Antigravity's usage and pricing structure is confusing.Pricing, quotas, and plan comments are based on what I was seeing in my accounts at the time of recording. These tools and plans change quickly, so double-check the current limits before spending money.More from Toby: https://tobyonfitnesstech.comSuggested chapters:00:00 Full AI coding agents livestream begins03:26 Codex speed and polish05:10 MiniMax M3 value surprise10:25 OpenClaw strengths and friction12:04 Hermes Desktop impressions14:12 Antigravity usage and pricing confusion16:00 What I would pay for17:45 Current favorite app52:40 Wrap-upTags: AI coding agents, AI coding tools, Codex, Claude Code, Hermes Desktop, MiniMax Code, MiniMax M3, OpenClaw, Antigravity, Gemini, OpenAI Codex, Claude Opus, agentic coding, coding harness, AI IDE, developer tools

12. juni 202652 min
episode Is the Speediance Ring Actually Trash? Here's the Truth artwork

Is the Speediance Ring Actually Trash? Here's the Truth

After an argument on Reddit about whether the Speediance ring is "trash," I lift on the Gym Monster setup and break down what actually matters: the ring vs. the ring clip vs. the Tonal-style clicker, why the bare ring degrades your grip, and where each accessory lands on my tier list.I also get into the stuff Speediance keeps getting wrong and right: dynamic weight modes finally being stable since V3, the UX bug they fixed and then re-broke, Bluetooth ring disconnects, the software bug they once tried to charge me $80 to "replace," thumbless-grip strength math with real deadlift and bench numbers, and the partner free-lift / custom-workout feature I keep asking them to bring back before the Tonal goes back on the wall.Part workout, part smart-home-gym reality check, part "please just add a weight-lock setting."Not medical, financial, or training advice. This is personal experience and commentary; talk to qualified professionals for your own health, training, and purchasing decisions.More from Toby: https://tobyonfitnesstech.comChapters:00:00 Is the Speediance Ring Trash?01:00 The Ring Clip vs the Tonal Clicker03:39 Proof: How the Bare Ring Degrades Your Grip10:51 Tier List and the $80 Replacement Gouge13:40 Buggy Updates and Bluetooth Disconnects17:52 Thumbless Grips and Real Strength Numbers23:49 The Click Fix, Partner Mode, and TonalTags: Speediance, Speediance ring, Speediance ring clip, Tonal, Tonal clicker, Gym Monster, smart home gym, digital resistance, dynamic weight modes, grip strength, thumbless grip, free lift mode, partner workout, fitness tech

10. juni 202629 min
episode I Owe Greg Doucette an Apology artwork

I Owe Greg Doucette an Apology

Today I lift on the Speediance/Gym Monster setup while unpacking a few fitness-tech and fitness-influencer topics: a public correction about how I heard Greg Doucette's Turkesterone/Anavar comments, the Speediance Pilates launch and recurring UX bugs, FitHub Titan resistance claims and confusing marketing, dynamic weight modes, internet comments about physique and fat loss, the software/AI background behind Project Aria, and whether Garmin/Whoop-style fitness trackers are actually useful.This one is part workout, part smart-home-gym discussion, part wearable-tech reality check.Not medical, financial, or training advice. This is personal experience and commentary; talk to qualified professionals for your own health, medication, training, or investing decisions.More from Toby: https://tobyonfitnesstech.comChapters:00:00 Arnold Classic and a Public Correction10:50 Speediance Update and Pilates Push14:23 FitHub Titan Gets Complicated20:04 Dynamic Weight Modes31:49 Internet Hate, Physique, and Fat-Loss Context43:11 Why Listen to Me?54:00 Are Fitness Trackers Accurate?1:00:30 The Whoop AFib Story1:07:13 Useful, Not PerfectTags: Greg Doucette, Speediance, Gym Monster, FitHub Titan, smart home gym, digital resistance, fitness tech, Garmin, Whoop, fitness trackers, recovery score, Turkesterone, Anavar, TRT, GLP-1, Project Aria

8. juni 20261 h 8 min
episode How I Train Around Elbow & Wrist Pain Without Skipping Progressive Overload artwork

How I Train Around Elbow & Wrist Pain Without Skipping Progressive Overload

Answering a viewer's question about elbow pain and walking through the same three-stage approach I use for my own chronic wrist pain so I can keep training without giving up progressive overload. I cover dumbbell form and elbow position, why eccentric mode on a smart gym can take pressure off the joints, VersaGrips vs. cheap knockoffs, the stack of wrist guards, braces, and thumb spicas I rotate between, and the heated wrist massager I use on bad days. From there I get into smart-gym software, Speediance vs. AEKE vs. Fit Hub Titan, Tonal-style arms, why I am waiting for a 300+ lb machine, my 240 to 210 lb cut, Project ARIA, and why I disagree with planning a month-long deload. Personal experience, not medical advice. If you have acute or persistent pain, see a qualified clinician. More from Toby: https://tobyonfitnesstech.com Chapters: 00:00 Viewer question: training around elbow pain 00:52 Why I switched from barbells to dumbbells 01:12 Cable machines, eccentric mode, and rep tempo 03:49 Form demo: elbow position with adjustable dumbbells 05:08 Chronic wrist pain and training through injuries 06:02 Why I disagree with planning a month-long deload 08:57 My three-stage approach to chronic joint pain 09:04 Step 1: VersaGrips and why the knockoffs did not cut it 11:42 Step 2: Wrist guards and braces 13:18 Step 3: Heated wrist massager 16:23 Three-stage recap 16:41 Smart gyms with Tonal-style arms 28:06 Honest take on Speediance software updates 29:05 Cutting from 240 to 210 and seasonal periodization 32:15 Project Aria: my AI fitness assistant 34:52 What I did after my last wrist flare-up 38:30 Knee braces and accumulated training injuries 41:51 Make training enjoyable 44:46 Intentional training, intentional family time 47:04 Fit Hub naming, Speediance Whoop competitor, and Nanos 52:44 Why I will not train like David Goggins 55:01 Wrap-up and thanks Tags: Elbow pain, wrist pain, progressive overload, smart gym, Speediance, AEKE, Fit Hub Titan, VersaGrips, home gym, fitness tech, injury management, strength training

6. juni 202655 min