METAMAX 3B, a versatile and ultralight Breath-by-Breath system. Equipped with advanced features such as bi-directional telemetry, dynamic flow control, and a powerful GPS module, it offers comprehensive insights into stress factors during field tests. Witness its groundbreaking capabilities, as even astronaut Alexander Gerst utilized it during his ISS mission, demonstrating its reliability and suitability for assessing human fitness in challenging environments.
The METAMAX® 3B can be operated in various
ways, either with a laptop, the Smart Control or completely autonomously. Just
synchronize the recorded test data with the application software MetaSoft®
Studio.
To determine
the velocity and location of a test person in a field test the METAMAX® 3B uses
a powerful GPS module. The module allows you to calculate velocity and altitude
changes and gives an objective picture of the person's stress factors during a
field test.
Features:
•
ultralight, mobile
Breath-by-Breath system (580 g)
•
telemetric range of over 1,000 m (bi-directional telemetry with Bluetooth®
technology)
•
chest and back carrying system
•
convenient control via Smart Control, laptop or
as stand-alone
•
6-hour
battery life
•
400 hours
data storage
•
constant dynamic flow control
•
free definable audio signals
With Swim Option:
ON SPACE MISSION:
Astronaut
Alexander Gerst has taken our METAMAX® 3B to the ISS. Last summer, the German
astronaut Alexander Gerst embarked on a research trip on the ISS. This was the
first time a mobile spiroergometry
device had been launched into space. During six months, Alexander Gerst used
the METAMAX® 3B to determine the impact of the space journey on the human
organism. Not only the launch into space is exhausting. Being in orbit, the
fitness changes and the journey back to earth is often more exhausting than the
beginning.
The project
which is accompanied by the Institute of Aerospace of the TU Dresden is not
just about assessing astronaut's fitness level. The results of the experiment
will help to optimally prepare future space tourists on their flight into space.