Not losing weight? This might be why...
softsculptor
Posts: 102
Research shows that certain exercise machines overestimate calories burned. The elliptical is the worst offender with an overestimation of up to 42%!
You can meticulously log your food, but if you are overestimating calories burned, you are bound to plateau. I am 100% convinced this is what caused my last plateau.
I spend, for instance, an hour on that thing during my workouts and in the end, it says I've burned 800 calories. Even though I have it on max resistance, I KNOW this is too good to be true as I am going at a pace that allows me to read while exercising.
Now I subtract 42% from all my elliptical calories and am successfully losing weight.
Worthwhile articles:
http://www.everyfit.com/2011/03/08/true-or-false-elliptical-machines-overestimate-your-calorie-burn
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Weekend/exercise-calorie-counters-work/story?id=9966500#.UDImBdAe5UM
You can meticulously log your food, but if you are overestimating calories burned, you are bound to plateau. I am 100% convinced this is what caused my last plateau.
I spend, for instance, an hour on that thing during my workouts and in the end, it says I've burned 800 calories. Even though I have it on max resistance, I KNOW this is too good to be true as I am going at a pace that allows me to read while exercising.
Now I subtract 42% from all my elliptical calories and am successfully losing weight.
Worthwhile articles:
http://www.everyfit.com/2011/03/08/true-or-false-elliptical-machines-overestimate-your-calorie-burn
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Weekend/exercise-calorie-counters-work/story?id=9966500#.UDImBdAe5UM
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Replies
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Best bet: buy your own heart rate monitor and use it and ignore the machine.0
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Those machines are famously high with their burn numbers! Some of them are okay, but I don't trust them.0
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Yea I wouldn't trust the numbers machines give you. Then again, I don't trust HRMs either haha0
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I also found the displayed calories on both elliptical and treadmill to be seriously over the number on my HRM. I trust the HRM's algorithm for calculating my personal calories burned much more than the gym equipment.
I also see that MFP calorie numbers are way over for me. For a Jazzercise session MFP will give me 700 calories, but my HRM is more in the neighborhood of 350! If I based my food intake on machines or MFP I'd never have a calorie deficit!! I might even gain rather than lose.
(Others have found the displays they saw were under what their HRM gave them.)0 -
I have never trusted the calories burned numbers coming from any of those machines!0
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Thanks so much for posting this!0
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Very, very true. We have an elliptical at home and that thing, despite taking age/height/weight, actually says I burn 800 kcal in just 30 minutes. Right. High intensity and all, that's just ridiculous.... MFP gives me less than 300, which is a lot more accurate....0
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Very useful post. I am suspicious of any exercise that burns 800-900 calories an hour. Almost nothing is that good and if it was, I wouldn't be able to do it!0
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Very good point, which is why I think I'm going to invest in one of those fit bits.0
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I personally do not even try to estimate calories burned with exercise. I do an exercise regime based on my goals and adjust calorie intake based on what is happening on the scale\calipers\mirror\tape measure0
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HRM + simple equation = closer to real calorie expenditure.
http://www.livestrong.com/article/207640-how-to-calculate-calories-burned-with-a-formula/0 -
Best bet: buy your own heart rate monitor and use it and ignore the machine.
This is what I do. Thanks for sharing this.0 -
The heart rate monitor I bought is the best! I'm doing Insanity and burning between 300-400 calories a workout (somedays less and somedays more).0
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MFP also rates about double of my HRM.0
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It all my maid's fault. She always made delicious breakfast and dinner.0
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I use my heart rate moniter and love it!0
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i think they way overestimate too. But for some of us, a dependable HRM is simply not an option. I just make sure to never eat back more than 15-25% of my exercise calories that they do give me credit for and it's worked for me so far.0
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Which is why you shouldnt be eating exercise calories back anyway, its counterproductive.0
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Apparently, this is a topic of high interest to those who have a picture of a cat in their profile.0
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Which is why you shouldnt be eating exercise calories back anyway, its counterproductive.
strong this.
everything else is broscience
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I trust my HRM a little more than the machines and even then, the HRM is just an estimate, too.
What I do is, I try not to eat my calories back.0 -
I have found the Estimated calorie burn on the machines to be LESS than the estimated Calorie burn here on MFP. To an extent, it is all a guessing game which is why I am not a big fan of eating back all my exercise calories.0
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Thanks for this helpful information. Explains why I have hit a plateau using those calories.0
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I eat what I set my calorie intake for and I don't take account for my exercise... I work a little harder during my workout if I know I am going to have a glass of wine or a good chocolate treat!0
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I have been using my HRM when I am on my stationary bike...it always says I have burned over 100 calories more than the machine says. BUT the HRM doesn't take into account calories I would burn doing nothing. So I figure the machine is probably close to accurate and I would rather err on the side of less than more.0
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Apparently, this is a topic of high interest to those who have a picture of a cat in their profile.
Yes it is :P0 -
The numbers on my gyms elliptical are vastly overrated, MFP guestimation however is very close to my HRM!0
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I don't trust MFPs numbers OR the machines. If it weren't for my HRM...I'd be way off in my calories.0
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my HRM actually shows less burned than some machines, but I don't use machines much either, so...
I never eat back all my exercise calories, only some. if you know your body well enough you'll know how much and what you need after a workout.0 -
I personally do not even try to estimate calories burned with exercise. I do an exercise regime based on my goals and adjust calorie intake based on what is happening on the scale\calipers\mirror\tape measure
This
If a difference due to overestimation of calories burned is causing you to gain weight (or not lose) then perhaps you are giving yourself too narrow a margin by which to eat and exercise.
Some people are really good at the "eat back exercise calories" plan, usually because they are active people by nature and they're making sure to get sufficient calories to support their lifestyle. For me personally, physical activity is a huge part of my lifestyle and burning calories is a side effect, not a direct attempt to lose weight. Weight loss comes from diet. Physical fitness comes from exercise.
I'm sorry to say it, but doing a 30 minute elliptical workout every day doesn't mean you need to eat more.0
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