Sceptical of the kCal count
24in24
Posts: 8 Member
My ego loves my kCal counter. How could it not?. My better self thinks it's inflated.
I use Garmin product with a Wahoo TickR HR strap. I do "work" when I work out, however the reading seems a bit high, well, by a lot I think.
I rode for 45-50 minutes this morning, says I burned 3000kj or 850/900 calories.
Does that seem right? I check my HR data and I'm not popping out of my chest but the effort is evident.
Is this a matter others confront? If so, what has been the solution you've found and if you'd share it - that'd be great
I use Garmin product with a Wahoo TickR HR strap. I do "work" when I work out, however the reading seems a bit high, well, by a lot I think.
I rode for 45-50 minutes this morning, says I burned 3000kj or 850/900 calories.
Does that seem right? I check my HR data and I'm not popping out of my chest but the effort is evident.
Is this a matter others confront? If so, what has been the solution you've found and if you'd share it - that'd be great
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Replies
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Seems very, very high.
Are you a very high standard athlete/rider? (You would have to be!)
One possibility would be if you have an unusually high exercise HR.
Roughly speaking for me as some who is fairly serious but not exceptional rider I would estimate my rough numbers to be:
3hrs to Century pace 500 cal/hr
2hrs quick 600-650 cal/hr
1hr very fast 720 cal
When I used HR for calorie estimates I customised the settings on my HRM with my tested HR Max and VO2 max.
I then compared and calibrated it to a power meter indoor trainer which outside of a sports science lab is about the most accurate method.
Garmin (and Strava) estimates aren't generally too bad for me but tend to under-estimate on low intensity rides.
As I'm not calorie counting anymore it's more out of interest these days.1 -
It seems high, hence my questions.
My maxHR is 198, nothing unusually high about that and my HR averages 150-160's which is below my LT
As a rider, nothing exceptional. And the data from today is riding my flat bar, on a flattish terrain, into the city- further adding to the skepticism
I find that I'm halving the reading, which is more of having a better conscience about what data I put up, and to balance against the energy I'm consuming through food
I appreciate the input - thank you kindly
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I have a 7 mile loop around the nearby lake that I ride after work some days. To cover it in about 30 minutes costs me ~225 kCal, from a power meter. A little more or less depending on the wind and traffic conditions, but always around there. Probably 150 to 200 feet of vertical.1
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Seems massively high0
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The only way to get that high calorie burn in that short of a time on a bike that i know of is if you were 350lbs+ which your pictures dont appear to support. So i would say that its just inaccurate.0
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Seems high, but it also depends on the person. Bigger body burns more energy at the same task (assuming intensity, duration are the same) than a smaller body.1
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Poisonedpawn78 wrote: »The only way to get that high calorie burn in that short of a time on a bike that i know of is if you were 350lbs+ which your pictures dont appear to support. So i would say that its just inaccurate.
The speed you can burn calories on a bike depends on your fitness level, not your weight.0 -
Thanks for the collective input
I'll pay more attention to my bike with the power meter and use that as reference
Enjoying this journey!
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