The Burn During Weights?
rwethington654
Posts: 34 Member
I am trying to cut back some pounds so obviously watching what I eat and trying to keep up with calories I burn. The treadmill tells me roughly the calories I burn but I have no idea of how much I burn during weight training. I know it's going to depend upon weight and intensity, but I don't even know where to start.
Personally, I don't lift very heavy (working on it) But for now, I tend to do lighter weight with more reps. I also like super-setting to keep the intensity up. And sessions usually last about an hour.
So, my questions: What do you burn during your weight training sessions? Could anyone give me a rough estimate for myself? Is there any way of knowing?
Thanks!
Personally, I don't lift very heavy (working on it) But for now, I tend to do lighter weight with more reps. I also like super-setting to keep the intensity up. And sessions usually last about an hour.
So, my questions: What do you burn during your weight training sessions? Could anyone give me a rough estimate for myself? Is there any way of knowing?
Thanks!
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Replies
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You could get yourself a physics textbook and calculate the minimum energy needed, lol. There's no real way to guess as it's very dependent on your routine and the weights and pretty much a million other things so trial and error is really the only way.
You also can't trust your treadmill either.0 -
Unless you're doing something extreme, the number is too small to matter.0
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Think of it this way, your nutrition will dictate you weight loss and exercise will just help augment it. As long as your nutrition is correct for your goals, then re-focus your exercise on a physical goal such as running faster, increasing strength, etc.0
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If you are lifting weights and moving for much of the hour, you can pick a modest number and use that to do some trial and error testing. Depending on your size 200-300 calories would not be unreasonable.0
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a got burnt once, had the scar for like 4 years.0
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I'd give yourself 100 calories and call it a day. That's basically what I do.0
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Log it under cardio instead of strength training and it will show you calorie burn estimates. There is no way it will be completely accurate but it will be a start for you.0
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I do 250 calories, as long as I lift for 45 minutes and hit multiple groups. NROL I think estimates 250 for 3 x 10 squats, lat pulldown, overheard press, lunges and swissball crunches, for example. I usually give 250 for 45-60 minutes of lifting. Some days I go easier, some days heavier, and I hope they average out. Just about everyone on here touts the long-term advantages of lifting and metabolic boost and all that, so I shouldn't be too far off here. I'm losing weight, anyway.0
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JustinAnimal wrote: »I do 250 calories, as long as I lift for 45 minutes and hit multiple groups. NROL I think estimates 250 for 3 x 10 squats, lat pulldown, overheard press, lunges and swissball crunches, for example. I usually give 250 for 45-60 minutes of lifting. Some days I go easier, some days heavier, and I hope they average out. Just about everyone on here touts the long-term advantages of lifting and metabolic boost and all that, so I shouldn't be too far off here. I'm losing weight, anyway.
I give myself 170 for an hour. The math supports this for me too.
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Thanks to everyone who replied! I wasn't expecting it to be some outrageous number, I was just curious.0
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