How many calories burned from weight training?
monikker
Posts: 322 Member
Just added some sets on MFP from my workout today, but the program doesn't account for calories burned while lifting, only from cardio. I know it's not a ton but I'm trying to gain so I want to try to account for those calories I burned. Maybe 5 calories per set?
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Replies
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I use the "bodyweight" entry for my strength training. I would use the same for weightlifting. It is based on time rather than the number of sets. The calories might seem high but your body uses energy while your muscles recover from lifting so you aren't only burning while actually doing the lifts.0
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The best way to determine your calorie burn whilst lifting is to invest in a heart rate monitor. I personally use a polar ft7 and it works really well but it is still only useful as a guide line and not 100% accurate. As an example yesterday my HRM gave me 578 calories for 90 mins of weight lifting. This was a heavy back and biceps session though with 5 sets on each lift and 60 second rest periods so it was quite an intense session.0
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The best way to determine your calorie burn whilst lifting is to invest in a heart rate monitor. I personally use a polar ft7 and it works really well but it is still only useful as a guide line and not 100% accurate. As an example yesterday my HRM gave me 578 calories for 90 mins of weight lifting. This was a heavy back and biceps session though with 5 sets on each lift and 60 second rest periods so it was quite an intense session.
HRMs are only accurate for cardio. They're not accurate for lifting.0 -
I found this to be helpful. http://www.answerfitness.com/296/how-many-calories-are-burned-weight-liftin/0
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For myself I've tried to keep it simple, I don't even bother figuring out how many calories I burn when I work out. I lift weights as well as cardio and the intensity varies depending on the day and the workout. Then there is the activity at work and at home that varies day to day as well. My goal has been to gain about half a pound a week until I get my weight back up where I want it. It took about two months to find a calorie level that works for me. I just kept raising the calorie level until I found the right level for me. Again, for me this has been much easier than trying to figure out how many calories I burn at the gym, doing yard work, etc., and then figuring out how many to add back in.
Hope this helps.0 -
There is a 'Strength training (weight lifting, weight training)' option you can add in your cardio section0
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The best way to determine your calorie burn whilst lifting is to invest in a heart rate monitor. I personally use a polar ft7 and it works really well but it is still only useful as a guide line and not 100% accurate. As an example yesterday my HRM gave me 578 calories for 90 mins of weight lifting. This was a heavy back and biceps session though with 5 sets on each lift and 60 second rest periods so it was quite an intense session.
HRMs are only accurate for cardio. They're not accurate for lifting.
And that is the reason I said it was useful as a guide and not 100% accurate0 -
Any time I've added calories for weight training my scale goes up. I don't even bother and deliberately set the calories burned to 0.1 per session.0
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Yes, I want to add on the scale a little bit. So I assume I need to eat back the calories plus more than I would on non-workout days.0
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@chloe where is that? I can't find it in the cardio section. What do I click on?
Click on the Exercise Tab
Under Cardiovascular Click Add Exercise
In the search box type Strength
It should be the only option that comes up0
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