Treadmill incline grade/percentage
Oceanborn2
Posts: 16 Member
I have an el cheapo Weslo Cadence 5.9 treadmill. There's a manual incline option via adjusting the legs to either-or positions, so it's either at an incline or it's not.
The legs are adjusted at the back of it, so going from level to the incline position means the back is in negative inches, and that's the opposite way to measure according to what I've been reading which tells you to measure the amount you gain at the front.
The back drops 3 inches, so could I just calculate it as the front raising by 3?
The legs are adjusted at the back of it, so going from level to the incline position means the back is in negative inches, and that's the opposite way to measure according to what I've been reading which tells you to measure the amount you gain at the front.
The back drops 3 inches, so could I just calculate it as the front raising by 3?
1
Replies
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Too much math. Go outside.0
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I, too, have an el cheapo Weslo Cadence, although mine is the G40 model. I've been trying to find an accurate way to determine the incline, as the "flat" adjustment is not quite flat. I downloaded a free app to determine the degree of the angle, and based on that (and some fancy math calculations I found with the help of Google), the flat setting on my model is actually about 1.5% elevation.
So that didn't answer your question, but if you're trying to determine the incline, it's a start!0 -
I emailed Weslo and they said it's a 6% incline. Considering that I read someone else calculate their treadmill at 6.7% when the front of theirs moved up by 3 inches, I'm guessing 6% is probably accurate.0
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Good to know! Is yours completely flat when it's not inclined?0
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If you have an iPhone, there is an app that you can download that will allow you to lay your phone down on an inclined surface and it will calculate the gradient/incline for you. I use it sometimes when I am curious about the grade of a hilly road that I am walking on outside. I don't have my phone in front of me, but if I recall, the app is called iGradient, and as far as I recall it was free. They may have an Android version, but I don't know.0
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Oceanborn2 wrote: »I have an el cheapo Weslo Cadence 5.9 treadmill. There's a manual incline option via adjusting the legs to either-or positions, so it's either at an incline or it's not.
The legs are adjusted at the back of it, so going from level to the incline position means the back is in negative inches, and that's the opposite way to measure according to what I've been reading which tells you to measure the amount you gain at the front.
The back drops 3 inches, so could I just calculate it as the front raising by 3?
yes. because by dropping the back three inches,, the front is now three inches higher. (assuming it has not moved during the drop.)0 -
I haven't measured it as meticulously as I should have, but from the appearance alone, it's probably no more than a 1% incline by default at the flat position, if that even.
I don't have an iphone but everything seems to point to a 6% incline. Maybe I should go in there and measure again just to check.0 -
Ok, so I have a similar question. I have a Wesco Ex14 treadmill where you manually change the elevation. I currently have it down 1 notch from horizontal which my phone level says is a 3.5 degree incline. If I ran 4.16km, what formula or calculator do I use to figure out the elevation gain?0
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