Things that make you go...Hmmmm....(outrageous calorie burn)

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  • chubbygirl253
    chubbygirl253 Posts: 1,309 Member
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    I have been on both sides of this. I got tired of rude comments from people who dont know me or my workout routine just flat out telling me I didn't burn what I said without even asking the activity, hours doing said activity, or my weight or fitness level. Not all exercise is created equal, u know? At 300 lbs I will burn more than someone half my weight. That being said, we were both right half the time. I got a heart rate monitor. Had been looking at fitbit but went with a Polar with chest monitor for accuracy sake. Also wanted something water proof for water aerobics. My conclusion is that mfp is far too generous with calorie burns. At my weight it says 60 mins on elliptical is worth 1163 calories. My hrm says average of 440. Do I still have days where I have 3000+ calorie burns? Yes. Do people say I don't? Yep. Do I care? Nope. I have my hrm so I know whats true. And if they bothered to question individual situations before making snap judgments they would learn on those days I am at the Y all day and have over 5 hrs of exercise those days not counting breaks, etc. Like last Thursday when I took RIPPED class in the morning and in the evening plus weight training and machines. But I do agree when people log housework, checking the mail, etc it can get pretty blurry. For me it was mfp overestimating calorie burns in the database. My hrm is the best fitness equipment purchase I've made because it clears all this up.
  • Cougar7279
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    I'm not really sure how to post and reply on all this stuff here. But to the person who challenged my previous comment where I said that this is all very subjective, I said much of the same thing as you did, I just don't need to try and impress everyone with a big word vocabulary... VO2 peaks when you're young, is also affected by genetics, and whether or not one is male or female... Also, typically drops by as much as 30 percent, by age 65 or so... Also factor in that hormones that benefit muscle mass and strength, like testosterone, also decrease significantly with age... So, it is in fact very subjective, or unique based on each individuals circumstances. Furthermore, I don't know of too many people who walk around with the testing equipment to measure VO2... And unless you go to an actual testing lab, every other method for determining VO2 would be best guestimate based on multiple factors, just like the discussion here is based upon: age, weight, muscle mass and/or body fat percentages and HR... So while there may exist objective measuring devices and principles, the fact that few have access makes your comment moot.... At best...
  • jsickman12
    jsickman12 Posts: 139 Member
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    You would hate me then, lol. Butmy numbers are done through my HRM. To the same effect though, I work very hard when I run, bike ride, or play hockey, so my numbers are legit.
  • Emilyrenee84
    Emilyrenee84 Posts: 9 Member
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    I use a HRM and those are the numbers that I always use now. It's way higher than what MFP and mapmyride is but I use to it compare my previous days results, not necessary to show off numbers. I have also noticed that when I walk with my neighbor (whom is taller) I tend to burn more than she does only because it takes more for my short legs to keep you with hers LOL. I'm only 4'10" and she's in the 5'8" or so range. So a 3 mile hike for her is like a 6 mile hike for me. Also depending on what kind of shape you're in and how elevated your heart rate gets depends on how much you burn.

    Do I think my HRM is completely accurate? Probably not, but it keeps me on track of what I burn daily since I use it for all of my workouts and they're all pretty close to each other day after day.
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
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    I'm not really sure how to post and reply on all this stuff here. But to the person who challenged my previous comment where I said that this is all very subjective, I said much of the same thing as you did, I just don't need to try and impress everyone with a big word vocabulary... VO2 peaks when you're young, is also affected by genetics, and whether or not one is male or female... Also, typically drops by as much as 30 percent, by age 65 or so... Also factor in that hormones that benefit muscle mass and strength, like testosterone, also decrease significantly with age... So, it is in fact very subjective, or unique based on each individuals circumstances. Furthermore, I don't know of too many people who walk around with the testing equipment to measure VO2... And unless you go to an actual testing lab, every other method for determining VO2 would be best guestimate based on multiple factors, just like the discussion here is based upon: age, weight, muscle mass and/or body fat percentages and HR... So while there may exist objective measuring devices and principles, the fact that few have access makes your comment moot.... At best...

    Actually, estimating VO2max on calculations has decently high accuracy compared to the normal tests.

    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16168867

    The estimated is worthy of using, and the biggest influence compared to other variables you mentioned, since age is in the calc already.
  • belgerian
    belgerian Posts: 1,059 Member
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    You do realize the heavier someone is the more they will burn doing the same thing someone who is 1/2 there weight. I am trying to give ppl the benefit of the doubt. But im sure there are some outrageous burns out there. I know for me if anything I underestimate my burn and usually overestimate my cal intake so I have a 10 or 15 percent buffer for the Just in case. I guess the bottom line is if they are happy where they are at and their progress so be it.
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
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    You do realize the heavier someone is the more they will burn doing the same thing someone who is 1/2 there weight. I am trying to give ppl the benefit of the doubt. But im sure there are some outrageous burns out there. I know for me if anything I underestimate my burn and usually overestimate my cal intake so I have a 10 or 15 percent buffer for the Just in case. I guess the bottom line is if they are happy where they are at and their progress so be it.

    Very true.

    275 lb person doing 4mph at 5% incline would burn 1002 calories.

    Of course, merely sitting around they would have burned 131 calories anyway - so their net burn over what would have happened anyway is only 871, but still decent.
  • Cyclingbonnie
    Cyclingbonnie Posts: 413 Member
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    Okay, I often have what some would consider outrageous calorie burns. I do the work, I post more for me than to impress anyone. Love it when someone compliments me, but I'm not showing off. I'm losing regularly, the main reason I'm posting my workouts and my food is so that I have a record. Log, Log, Log and I also blog.

    My real question is this ... why does anyone care weather someone else is being truthful about their workouts and/or food diaries. Who does it hurt or effect if they lie? Not me. I haven't been here very long just a little over 2 months, but it is being very productive for me, and that is what I care about.
  • lobo_a_gogo
    lobo_a_gogo Posts: 265 Member
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    FITBIT!