Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

nattK

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Sep 17, 2014
726
1,860
The Upside Down
I was looking through Apple's support article on band interference with the compass in the Series 5 and came across this:

Earlier Sport Loop watch bands use magnets or magnetic material that might interfere with the Apple Watch compass. The compass isn't affected by Sport Loop bands introduced in September 2019.

How and why do pre-2019 sport loops include magnets? Aren't they just nylon fibers, velcro, and plastic? I can't see why there are magnets in the pre-2019 sport loops. Magnetic nylon fibers?
 

YatBob

macrumors 6502
Apr 23, 2014
273
74
Louisiana
Isn't then band attached magnatecially, I remember reading somewhere in the past that when you pushed the band release tab you were releasing the magnet, if so wonder what the difference is in the 2019 bands
 
  • Like
Reactions: twanj

staggerlee41

macrumors 65816
Sep 25, 2017
1,072
1,057
Pittsburgh, PA
I'm scratching my head on this one. Clearly the Milanese and Leather Loops have magnets, those are obvious, but I can't say that I recall seeing a magnet in any part of the pre-2019 Sport Loops. It would be interesting to hear what customer support has to say about this.
 
  • Like
Reactions: twanj

xraydoc

Contributor
Oct 9, 2005
11,004
5,473
192.168.1.1
I was looking through Apple's support article on band interference with the compass in the Series 5 and came across this:



How and why do pre-2019 sport loops include magnets? Aren't they just nylon fibers, velcro, and plastic? I can't see why there are magnets in the pre-2019 sport loops. Magnetic nylon fibers?
The end cap that covers the free end of the sport loop contained either a piece of metal or a magnetized piece of metal underneath/inside the plastic. I discovered this by accident when a magnet near my wrist stuck to the end of the sport loop I was wearing.

Apparently the new ones that came out with the series 5 don't contain this piece of metal underneath the plastic.

Whether it's enough to interfere with the compass significantly, that I don't know.
 
  • Like
Reactions: staggerlee41

supertomtom

macrumors 6502a
Sep 21, 2007
638
671
Gold Coast, Australia
The end cap that covers the free end of the sport loop contained either a piece of metal or a magnetized piece of metal underneath/inside the plastic. I discovered this by accident when a magnet near my wrist stuck to the end of the sport loop I was wearing.

Apparently the new ones that came out with the series 5 don't contain this piece of metal underneath the plastic.

Whether it's enough to interfere with the compass significantly, that I don't know.

I’m curious as to what the function of that piece of magnet is for. I can’t think of any mechanism in which it would help with securing the strap.

Apple must have had their rationale for doing that I guess. How strange.
 

xraydoc

Contributor
Oct 9, 2005
11,004
5,473
192.168.1.1
I’m curious as to what the function of that piece of magnet is for. I can’t think of any mechanism in which it would help with securing the strap.

Apple must have had their rationale for doing that I guess. How strange.
Again, don't know if it's an actual magnet or just a piece of metal. Haven't had time (or inclination, actually) to test it.
 

CarlJ

Contributor
Feb 23, 2004
7,012
12,216
San Diego, CA, USA
The end cap that covers the free end of the sport loop contained either a piece of metal or a magnetized piece of metal underneath/inside the plastic.
Interesting find! I just tested this with a Black Sport Loop (from when they were first released), and a Cape Cod Blue Sport Loop (so, pretty recent, but not after the Series 5 release), and they both quite readily stick to the magnet on my Milanese Loop. Not sure why they're like that, but they are. They don't seem to try to stick to the rest of the band, so, ferrous, but not magnetized.

A small rod of ferrous metal in that end piece... could be a stiffener, or to anchor the end of the nylon material before/while molding on the plastic bit. It's possible it's there simply to make production easier (some tool/jig latching onto the end using a magnet), but that doesn't seem very likely.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.