Garmin vs Strava

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Kupe
Kupe Posts: 758 Member
Has anybody also noticed the difference in speed and calorie burn when uploading form garmin to strava. When. It comes to the calories not too bothered as I would rather have the lower count however the speed is something else, I would always want the faster of the two.

I know they work on different algorithms, but is would much prefer it to be a little closer than what it currently is.

Not sure why strava doesn't just take it directly from the device without running it through their own system, considering garmin is pretty reliable source for information.

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  • Jakess1971
    Jakess1971 Posts: 1,208 Member
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    I've noticed this in the past, I always go for the lower cal count which is the Garmins using the HRM, generally I know personally for every 2 hrs of cycling at my usual pace burns 1000 cals and that's stood me in good stead for a while now.
  • Kupe
    Kupe Posts: 758 Member
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    I am finding that strava has the lower calorie count than garmin, which is a bit strange
  • TheBigYin
    TheBigYin Posts: 5,682 Member
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    Strava's calorie count is calculated based on power rather than heart rate. Of course, if you're nor using a power meter (or pseudo-powermeter like the powercal HR belt) then it's pretty much guesswork...

    I did a bit of a "write-up" as to how Strava calculates its calories on another thread...
    One or two people may have noticed that the Calorie consumption figures for a given bike ride may well be different to the figures that are calculated using your Garmin or other Logging devices... I noticed this a while ago, and being the kind of numerically obsessed geek that I am, I decided to look into it further.

    It is my contention that rather than simply taking the calorie calculation that your HRM/GPS logging device provides, Strava has taken upon itself to try and give what could potentially be a more accurate figure - certainly if the data logging device is a non heart-rate-monitor linked smartphone...

    As I'm sure you have all noticed, Strava works out a "Virtual Power" figure for your ride, which is based on the speed you're riding at and the amount of up/down/steepness of gradients you have encountered. So, for the entire ride, Strava has a figure for the number of Watts of power you are "laying down". Therefore, it can also add this up and arrive at the number of total watts expended, which, divided by the number of seconds ridden, gives a total amount of energy expended in driving the bike and you along. (Basic Physics - 1 Joule = 1 watt per second).

    So - to take a worked example - my Sunday ride from the 13th October 2013 - http://app.strava.com/activities/88753940 - we have a "Total Work" figure off 1,555 kJoules of energy needed to drive me and the bike around that particular route. Okay, so how do we get from that to Calories. Simples - google tells us that 1 joule = 0.239005736 calories. For the purposes of this calculation, lets simplify a little and just work to 4 decimal places shall we...

    Therefore, the actual energy used to move me and the bike around was 1,555 *0.2390 = 371.645 kCalories.

    Wait a Minute Mark, I hear you say... Strava reckons that you burned 1656 kCalories on that ride, not 372! ... What's going on ??

    Again, it's a fairly simple thing. While the Pedal Cycle is a wonderfully efficient machine, the Human body is a lousy inefficient engine (some more than others - but I'll get to that later!) So, while I pushed out 372kCal of energy riding, I also wasted energy in sweating, in digesting my breakfast, in thinking about what I was going to have for dinner, worrying about if I'd get home in time to hand over a Turbo Trainer to Fran, producing Snot, My heart beating approximately 20,000 times, Talking to fellow cyclists, filling (and subsequently emptying) my bladder and 1001 other little things that the human body does while riding a bike that AREN'T directly related to shoving the pedals round. This is where things go from the directly measurable (because, in fairness, MY power figures WERE from a real Power Meter, rather than Strava's Guesstimates) to the "taking an average figure and hoping it's right"

    So, let's call the difference between what you shove, and what you burn to shove it the "Metabolic Efficiency Factor" (or MEF for short, because I can't be doing with re-typing that again and again. Again, a quick Google seems to show that studies tend to put this MEF at somewhere between 20 and 25%... So - I did a little digging...

    All this data is based on MY ride information over the last week or so...

    StravaGarminTBY.png

    I've basically used the Calories and Work figure to come out with the MEF that Strava is using... Allowing for Strava only displaying whole digit numbers, it would appear that the MEF for my rides seems to be coming out pretty consistently at 21.43%. Interestingly, the data also shows that its using the same figure for rides on my Roadbike (which has a power meter on), on the Indoor Trainer (which was taking power figures from the Indoor trainer's calculations of resistance) and from the MTB, where the power figures were wholely down to Strava's own power guessing routine...

    Just for the sake of thoroughness, I also decided to have a look at a cross section of the members of the GS MyFitnessPal "club" and see if if this MEF changed (say, depending on Age, Gender, Height, Weight, Calculated Body Mass or any other wierd and wonderful way.)

    StravaPowerCalcs.png

    NOPE. Same figure more or less... and that list covers a fair cross-section of ages, genders and body shapes I reckon... It appears that they've decided on a "one size fits all" approach...

    Just out of interest, here's a good bit of data...

    Calories 6621, Work 5938, 21.43%... want to know who that was... Laurens ten Dam - the Pro from the Belkin Team..

    ( http://app.strava.com/activities/86637795 for confirmation :wink: )

    Now, call me a defeatist, but I seriously doubt that MY metabolic efficiency is likely to be exactly on a par with one of the better Pro's :laugh:



    But, you may also have noticed another column in the first little chart I posted... The "Garmin Calories"...

    Well, it's self explanatory I suppose - thats the calories that My Garmin read at the end of the ride. One thing to notice is - they're all over the shop... you'd expect them to be all either higher or all lower, or all somewhere near, wouldn't you...

    So did I at first. Then I thought about it a little more. You see, a few months ago, I went and submitted myself to one of those "NewLeaf" Metabolic Profiling tests. There's a really good writeup on the DC Rainmaker blog if you want to know more about the test ( http://www.dcrainmaker.com/2012/01/look-at-testing-with-new-leaf-fitness.html ) - mine was much the same, but on a Wattbike rather than a treadmill thankfully.

    The end result is a sort of "profile" of my metabolic efficiency factor, broken down into 10bpm "bands" so the Garmin knows that if my HR is showing between 80-89 bpm, i'm burning 6.76561kCals /minute of fat and a total of 9.02081 kCals, whereas between 140 and 149 i'm burning through 0.76040 kCals of fat and 13.80201 kcals in total. It has data for basically all points between 30bpm and something like 240bpm, though if I hit either of those figures, i'm sure my calorie expenditure would be the last thing on my mind.

    I guess that all this waffle show is that estimating Calories from exercise is a) difficult b) an inexact science and c) if you give 5 people a chance to do the calculations, you'll get 5 different ways of performing the calculations and AT LEAST 5 different answers.

    For me, I Have a sort of heirachy of how much I believe the data... From least belief to most it runs...

    MFP's Guesstimates based on time of a "exercise"

    Endomondo based on smartphone tracking but no HR data

    GPS and HR tracked data

    GPS / HR and POWER tracked data on a "Vanilla" Garmin Device

    GPS / HR and POWER tracked data on a "NewLeaf Calibrated" Garmin Device

    ...



    But there's a REALLY good rule of thumb to work by... if you've got 2 or more different figures - LOG THE SMALLEST and err on the side of caution.
  • TheBigYin
    TheBigYin Posts: 5,682 Member
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    as to speed discrepancies... the average speed that is shown on the Garmin head unit is the overall average speed, including stoppages - if you look on Garmin Connect there is actually 3 average speeds shown...

    Garmin
    14401131723_0792712205_o.jpg

    Strava
    14194516837_2fe827e722_o.jpg

    Both of the above were taken from my ride yesterday, and it appears that Strava's average speed is the same as the "average moving speed" from Garmin Connect, BUT the elapsed time doesn't seem to match up with any of the time figures on Garmin Connect...
  • composite
    composite Posts: 138 Member
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    "Elapsed time" on Strava is the same as "Time" on Connect. Yes there is an 8 second discrepancy in your numbers but they are the same "measure"