HRM calorie question
amw8675309
Posts: 95 Member
for those that use an HRM...
do you count the calories it shows at the end of the workout, or subtract out what you would have burned had you not been working out?
So for example, if i burn about 1700 calories (sedentary setting) per day and I typically run for 60 minutes--should i be subtracting 70 calories from what the monitor is telling me (1700/24= 70 calories per hour burned a day) before adding them into my daily goal? I'm not concerned when i work out for a shorter period of time, but typically my workouts are 60 minutes+ and that number can make a difference if i'm eating back my exercise calories
do you count the calories it shows at the end of the workout, or subtract out what you would have burned had you not been working out?
So for example, if i burn about 1700 calories (sedentary setting) per day and I typically run for 60 minutes--should i be subtracting 70 calories from what the monitor is telling me (1700/24= 70 calories per hour burned a day) before adding them into my daily goal? I'm not concerned when i work out for a shorter period of time, but typically my workouts are 60 minutes+ and that number can make a difference if i'm eating back my exercise calories
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Replies
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anyone?0
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I've given this a lot of thought and here's what I've come up with: After I put in a good workout, my body continues to burn calories at a higher rate that it would during normal activity. To test this, I wore my HRM for 24 hours without deviating from my regular workout then did the same a different day with no workouts.what I found was that when I subtracted the workout calories burned from the total for that day, the remaining calories burned were still far higher than my control day. Does that make sense? So essentially, no, I don't. I use exactly what my HRM says.0
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A HRM doesn't deduct your BMR so if you wanted to be more accurate you could do that.
FWIW. wearing your HRM 24 hrs a day will give you hugely inflated numbers. The algorithms are set for elevated HR so when you wear it during normal activity it throws the math off.0 -
i only wear my HRM when i workout at the gym, that is it...
i turn it on as soon as i start and turn it off once im done with my cool down....
i fail to see how wearing it all day is of any help at all...thats not what its intended for...
if you want something that you were all day look into the BodyMedia HRM...0 -
This is a great question... I have been wondering the same thing because I use a fitbit and a friend asked if logging and letting my fitbit add or subtract at the end of the day were not "double dipping". I told her no and gave her the reason that I am set up on the site for a 1000 calorie deficit and in the long run, the only additional calories that I would have to subtract are 50 that I would have burned with no activity according to my BMR during my 1 hour workout...I just keep under my daily limit by about 50 and call it good...that is why the programmers write programs, so I do not have to *think about these things...I figure if I stay under by 50-100 on most days, I am good....0
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I've given this a lot of thought and here's what I've come up with: After I put in a good workout, my body continues to burn calories at a higher rate that it would during normal activity. To test this, I wore my HRM for 24 hours without deviating from my regular workout then did the same a different day with no workouts.what I found was that when I subtracted the workout calories burned from the total for that day, the remaining calories burned were still far higher than my control day. Does that make sense? So essentially, no, I don't. I use exactly what my HRM says.
i did the same thing and noticed the same thing also.
that said, i turn that puppy on when I start my workout and it is off before I even get off the bike.0 -
I stop as soon as I am done AND subtract the baseline BMR contribution. Yes, you burn longer but that slows down pretty quickly, unless you have done somthing crazy like an all out Tabata.
I also try to make sure that i log everything a little conservatively... i round my food calories up, i round my work out calories down, i only eat back half of my exercise calories, etc. That always assures that i will be near or under my daily allotment. make sense?
Also, i have gone through 4 HRMs. My personal experience is that they end up rating your workout a bit harder than it actually was.
Great question and good luck!0 -
I've given this a lot of thought and here's what I've come up with: After I put in a good workout, my body continues to burn calories at a higher rate that it would during normal activity. To test this, I wore my HRM for 24 hours without deviating from my regular workout then did the same a different day with no workouts.what I found was that when I subtracted the workout calories burned from the total for that day, the remaining calories burned were still far higher than my control day. Does that make sense? So essentially, no, I don't. I use exactly what my HRM says.
i did the same thing and noticed the same thing also.
that said, i turn that puppy on when I start my workout and it is off before I even get off the bike.0 -
I deduct my BMR to eat back calories. If you're not then it oesnt really matter.0
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