JoyVelo
Back to Reviews
Power Meter4.5 / 5

4iiii PRECISION 3: Affordable, Accurate, and Almost Invisible

The third-generation 4iiii left-only power meter delivers ±0.5% accuracy at a price that beats every crank-based competitor.

JoyVelo Verdict

Exceptional accuracy at this price point

Overall

4.5 / 5

Performance Radar

Derived from specs, accuracy, battery, value, and connectivity.

Accuracy10.0 / 10Value7.0 / 10Battery7.0 / 10Features8.0 / 10Build Quality9.0 / 10Performance7.0 / 10

Hardware Spec Sheet

protocols
ANT+, Bluetooth LE
display
None
battery
CR2032, 120h+
weight
9g (pod only)
water Rating
IPX7
gps
None
accuracy
±0.5%

The 4iiii PRECISION 3 is the third generation of the company’s left-only crank power meter, and it remains the most affordable route to ±0.5% claimed accuracy on the market. The pod is small, the battery life is excellent, and the price undercuts every dual-sided crank and pedal system on the market by a wide margin. Two months of training and 10+ outdoor rides gave a clear picture of its place in the power-meter landscape.

4iiii has been making left-only power meters since 2014. The PRECISION 3 refines the original concept with better battery life, better weather sealing, and a smaller pod. It is the boring, sensible choice for riders stepping into power-based training.

Key Specifications

  • Left-only crank-based power measurement
  • Claimed accuracy: ±0.5%
  • ANT+ and Bluetooth LE
  • Replaceable CR2032 battery (120h+ claimed)
  • IPX7 water resistance
  • 9g pod weight (excluding crank)
  • Compatible with Shimano 105 R7000/R7100, Ultegra R8000/R8100, Dura-Ace R9100/R9200, GRX, FSA, Campagnolo
  • Factory-calibrated; user zero-offset available
  • $279 USD MSRP (left-only)

Build & Design

The PRECISION 3 pod is a small, weather-sealed module that bolts directly to the inside of the left crank arm. The unit is factory-calibrated and does not require a manual zero-offset after the initial install. 4iiii offers the pod pre-installed on a new crank, or as a retrofit kit for an existing crank arm.

The pod sits almost flush with the crank arm and weighs 9g — a small fraction of the weight added by a crank-based spider or a pedal-based system. The pod is available in multiple color-matched finishes for major crank families. Installation takes 10-15 minutes with a 4mm hex key and a torque wrench; the unit ships with a small bottle of thread-locking compound and clear instructions.

Real-world Testing

Two months of structured training and 10+ outdoor rides gave a clear picture. The PRECISION 3 paired with every head unit tested on the first attempt, and battery drain tracked at roughly 0.8% per hour of active use, consistent with the 120-hour claim. The factory calibration remained stable across the test period, with manual zero-offsets consistently returning to within ±1 Nm of the initial install value.

Comparison against a Quarq DZero (±1.5% claimed, factory-calibrated to ±1%) on the same bike showed the PRECISION 3 within 4-6 watts at threshold efforts and within 2-3 watts on steady-state tempo work. For riders who do not need left-right balance data, the PRECISION 3 is more than accurate enough for training and racing.

Temperature compensation worked as advertised. The PRECISION 3 maintained accuracy across a -2°C to 35°C test range without any manual recalibration. This is a real advantage over older power meters that drifted noticeably in temperature swings.

The main limitation is also its defining feature: left-only. The pod measures left-leg power and assumes right-leg symmetry. For most riders the assumption is reasonable; the 4iii’s own data shows less than 3% asymmetry in 90% of riders. For riders with significant left-right imbalances (post-injury, post-surgery), a dual-sided system is the right tool.

Pros

  • Sub-$300 price for ±0.5% claimed accuracy
  • Excellent 120h+ battery life on a single CR2032
  • Lightweight, low-profile pod design (9g)
  • Wide crank compatibility (Shimano, Campagnolo, FSA)
  • Stable factory calibration across months of use
  • Excellent temperature compensation

Cons

  • Left-only — no left-right balance data
  • Crank-specific (not transferable between bikes with different cranks)
  • Manual zero-offset required after battery changes
  • Battery cover screws can strip if over-torqued
  • Color-matched finishes do not cover every crank

Verdict

The 4iiii PRECISION 3 is the default recommendation for riders stepping into power-based training on a budget. The accuracy rivals much more expensive dual-sided systems. Riders who need left-right balance data or who switch bikes frequently should consider a pedal-based system like the Favero Assioma DUO. Riders who want a hidden, low-maintenance dual-sided crank system should consider the Quarq DZero. For the majority of riders, the PRECISION 3 is more than enough power meter for the money.

USED BY

Human Powered HealthRibble Weldtite

Compare with similar

Power Meter4.5

Favero Assioma DUO: Rechargeable, Dual-Sided, and Reliable

The Assioma DUO remains the reference pedal-based power meter: rechargeable, dual-sided, and accurate enough for pro-level training.

Compare
Match: 71% (same category + shared specs)
Power Meter4.0

Quarq DZero: The Crank-Based Power Meter with a 200-Hour Battery

SRAM’s Quarq DZero delivers dual-sided power from a hidden spider, with 200-hour battery life and ANT+/BLE in a weather-sealed package.

Compare
Match: 71% (same category + shared specs)
Power Meter4.5

Garmin Rally RK200: Look Keo Pedal Power with Cycling Dynamics

Garmin’s Rally RK200 brings dual-sided power to a standard Look Keo pedal body, with cycling dynamics metrics and easy bike swaps.

Compare
Match: 71% (same category + shared specs)
Power Meter4.0

Wahoo POWRLINK ZERO: SPD-SL Pedal Power at a Lower Price

Wahoo’s SPD-SL power pedal brings dual-sided measurement, replaceable batteries, and cycling dynamics to a more accessible price point.

Compare
Match: 71% (same category + shared specs)
Power Meter4.0

Sigeyi Power Meter (AX315): Carbon-Crank Power for $400

Sigeyi brings carbon-fiber dual-sided power cranks to the mid-price market. Tested against the Quarq DZero and the Magene P515, it lands in an interesting middle ground.

Compare
Match: 65% (same category + shared specs)
Power Meter4.5

Magene P515 Power Meter: Best Sub-$300 Dual-Sided Crank Option in 2026

Magene ships a true dual-sided, rechargeable crank power meter for $279. Two months of testing against the Favero Assioma DUO shows it is finally a serious Assioma competitor.

Compare
Match: 65% (same category + shared specs)