Strength training does not increase my calorie intake
Rstacy2014
Posts: 1 Member
I exercise 6 days a week. On cardio days, after I log, it tells me the amounts of calories I've burned and gives me more to eat. I strength train 3 days a week and work hard. It only gives me calories burned for my mile warm up? Why is this?
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Replies
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To get a calorie burn estimate, log strength training under cardio.
Strength training is really tough to estimate.0 -
How do you do that? When I search for bench press under cardio it does not show up.0
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theologyjohn wrote: »How do you do that? When I search for bench press under cardio it does not show up.
search for strength training. Again, you don't burn a lot of calories doing strength training. I log it and typically eat back the calories and have had success, your results may vary. If you are losing faster than your planned rate, then eating back strength training calories would be fine, if you are losing slower than planned, then you shouldn't.0 -
Add "Strength training (weight lifting, weight training)" to Cardiovascular to get estimated Calories burned added to your Diary. Please note that the Calories burned for Cardiovascular exercises provided by MFP are based on published metabolic equivalent of tasks (METs), which are estimates for a general population and may differ for you as an individual. If desired, add individual strength training exercises, such as "Biceps Curl," to Strength Training to have a log of sets, reps, and weights as individual exercises.
Please see these articles, and search for other helpful articles on the MFP Help pages...
myfitnesspal.desk.com/customer/portal/articles/11170-why-don-t-you-calculate-calories-burned-for-strength-training-
myfitnesspal.desk.com/customer/portal/topics/455842-exercise-diary-and-exercise-database/articles
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You don't burn a lot of calories in strength training. It's good to build up muscle which will burn more calories long term and rev your metabolism while at rest but the biggest burn is in active, high intensity exercise or during HIIT.
For a year I wore a Body Media which is certified as a medical device and 95% accurate in estimating calorie burn. There was barely an uptick during weight training. And my weight loss coupled with food tracking proved that data to be true. Log it to track your progress but I wouldn't count any calories burned during that time any more than you burn during a leisurely stroll.0 -
You have to select just "weight training" and select the time.0
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It's difficult to estimate the number of calories burned while lifting weights, especially if you are doing the typical lift heavy then minute or so break in between.
The estimator on myfitnesspal is going to over-estimate and a heart rate monitor will not be accurate.
My opinion? Don't log it at all, instead include this in your "activity level" you choose. I will log "strength training 1 calorie burned" no matter how long i was at it or what i did for strength training that day. This works for me.0 -
rainbowbow wrote: »It's difficult to estimate the number of calories burned while lifting weights, especially if you are doing the typical lift heavy then minute or so break in between.
The estimator on myfitnesspal is going to over-estimate and a heart rate monitor will not be accurate.
My opinion? Don't log it at all, instead include this in your "activity level" you choose. I will log "strength training 1 calorie burned" no matter how long i was at it or what i did for strength training that day. This works for me.
This is what I do.0 -
Thank you all for your responses! What about a program like P90x? It is weight lifting but moves at a pace that keeps your heart rate up.0
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theologyjohn wrote: »Thank you all for your responses! What about a program like P90x? It is weight lifting but moves at a pace that keeps your heart rate up.
METs - Activity
3.0 - Walking, 2.5 mph, leisurely pace
3.0 - Strength training (weight lifting, weight training)
3.5 - Calisthenics, home, light/moderate effort
4.0 - Water aerobics, water calisthenics
5.0 - Aerobics, low impact
5.0 - Walking, 4.0 mph, very brisk pace
6.0 - Teaching aerobics class
6.5 - Aerobics, general
7.0 - Aerobics, high impact
8.0 - Circuit training, general
8.0 - Calisthenics (pushups, sit-ups), vigorous effort
8.5 - Aerobics, step, with 6-8 inch step
10.0 - Aerobics, step, with 10-12 inch step
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theologyjohn wrote: »Thank you all for your responses! What about a program like P90x? It is weight lifting but moves at a pace that keeps your heart rate up.
It's using weights as cardio. It isn't really strength training.
ie. if I do 20 deadlifts at 40% of my 1 rep max then I'm using a small amount of weight in high repetition to increase my heart rate = cardiovascular exercise. CrossFit does it all the time. P90x and other circuit based programmes do it too.
Long story short, I'd log that as circuit training.0 -
theologyjohn wrote: »Thank you all for your responses! What about a program like P90x? It is weight lifting but moves at a pace that keeps your heart rate up.
It's using weights as cardio. It isn't really strength training.
ie. if I do 20 deadlifts at 40% of my 1 rep max then I'm using a small amount of weight in high repetition to increase my heart rate = cardiovascular exercise. CrossFit does it all the time. P90x and other circuit based programmes do it too.
Long story short, I'd log that as circuit training.
same
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Thank you, everyone. This is very helpful.0
This discussion has been closed.
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