How many calories do you burn in the gym?

I'm only asking as last night my heart rate monitor said i lost 1100 calories! This can't be right can it? 20 mins elliptical, 15 treadmill, 5 rowing machine, 5 stairs machine & weight lifting. I use the chest strap ect.

Replies

  • PurpleTina
    PurpleTina Posts: 390 Member
    It depends really; on how much you weigh, and whether or not your HRM is set up with your age / weight / height. (but it does sound a bit high to me).
  • VonTinka
    VonTinka Posts: 89 Member
    Yep i did set it up with weight, height & age ect.
  • averous214
    averous214 Posts: 7 Member
    I think you just need to use your heart rate monitor to just monitor your heart, 1100 calories in less than an hour? highly unlikely, half of that is still unlikely, but more realistic. And you really need to be pushing pretty hard to burn 550 calories in an hour.
  • 5stringjeff
    5stringjeff Posts: 790 Member
    HRM won't accurately measure calories burned doing strength training. I use these calculations instead:
    http://www.livestrong.com/article/338469-how-to-calculate-calories-burned-weight-lifting/
  • RatherBeFishing
    RatherBeFishing Posts: 61 Member
    It depends on how much you weigh, if I push it hard doing HIIT (avg heart rate of 170) I can burn 1000-1200 in an hour (I weigh 220 lbs). Most of your exercises were cardio and rowing is a great full body workout. Without knowing your weight and how hard you were pushing it, it's hard to say. What was your avg heart rate?

    Here is a great link for calories burned: http://www.shapesense.com/fitness-exercise/calculators/heart-rate-based-calorie-burn-calculator.aspx
  • Depends on what I do. Of course you'll burn more cals if you do more cardio. I burn over 1,000 cals in about 1 1/2 hours (if cardio is involved) What HRM brand do you have?
  • I wear a HRM and as a rule of thumb normally I manage 100-120 calories per 10 minutes of Cardio exercise. I would say 1100 sounds a bit too high, although I'm not sure how that could have happened
  • rduhlir
    rduhlir Posts: 3,550 Member
    I don't use my HRM for weight lifting. That being said, on my runs I burn about 300ish doing a 30 min run on the treadmill.
  • sijomial
    sijomial Posts: 19,809 Member
    Sounds very high. Yesterday I did a 5k on the rowing machine in just over 21 mins, mostly at 95% of my max heartrate, 302 calories (so under 900 per hour in unlikely event I could maintain that effort for 60 mins).

    Was your heartrate showing at about the rate you would expect to see during your workout? Bad contact with chest strap perhaps or interference between chest strap and watch?
  • Latona38
    Latona38 Posts: 111 Member
    Last night I burned almost 1400 calories using a HRM with chest strap. It's possible. It depends on how hard your pushing yourself and how long your heart rate is in the calorie burning zone
  • AuntieKT
    AuntieKT Posts: 235 Member
    HRM won't accurately measure calories burned doing strength training. I use these calculations instead:
    http://www.livestrong.com/article/338469-how-to-calculate-calories-burned-weight-lifting/

    I had a question about this last week and could have really used this calculation, LOL! Everyone says that heart rate monitors way overestimate the amount of calories burned when doing things like weight lifting. I wear mine during weight lifting just to be able to save the amount of time I worked out and also cuz I ususally do some cardio afterwards and I don't want to go have to put it on after lifting. Last night I lifted for 82 minutes. My heart rate monitor (Polar FT4) said that I burned 202 calories. If I use the calculation you provided and even pick the smallest modifier "Lighter weight lifting with moderate effort burns 0.028 calories per pound per minute." I get 351 calories... so I guess I'm confused. If my heart rate monitor OVERestimates calories burned, why is the number it gives me LESS than this calculation?

    And to answer the OP, yeah I think something isn't right with the amount it said. 1,100 for under an hour of work seems almost impossible...
  • K_Serz
    K_Serz Posts: 1,299 Member
    Unless your 225lbs+ and heart rate is avg 165+ for an hour. I doubt it.

    I burn about 1000 calories an hour and I have to push myself very hard to get it.
  • Geeky_Girl
    Geeky_Girl Posts: 239 Member
    I wear a HRM and as a rule of thumb normally I manage 100-120 calories per 10 minutes of Cardio exercise. I would say 1100 sounds a bit too high, although I'm not sure how that could have happened

    This is the same for me. I burn about 100 cals/per 10 minutes with a heart rate at about 160. It's probably possible, but I would say it sounds a little high.
  • K_Serz
    K_Serz Posts: 1,299 Member
    HRM won't accurately measure calories burned doing strength training. I use these calculations instead:
    http://www.livestrong.com/article/338469-how-to-calculate-calories-burned-weight-lifting/

    I had a question about this last week and could have really used this calculation, LOL! Everyone says that heart rate monitors way overestimate the amount of calories burned when doing things like weight lifting. I wear mine during weight lifting just to be able to save the amount of time I worked out and also cuz I ususally do some cardio afterwards and I don't want to go have to put it on after lifting. Last night I lifted for 82 minutes. My heart rate monitor (Polar FT4) said that I burned 202 calories. If I use the calculation you provided and even pick the smallest modifier "Lighter weight lifting with moderate effort burns 0.028 calories per pound per minute." I get 351 calories... so I guess I'm confused. If my heart rate monitor OVERestimates calories burned, why is the number it gives me LESS than this calculation?

    And to answer the OP, yeah I think something isn't right with the amount it said. 1,100 for under an hour of work seems almost impossible...

    Last night my HRM said I burned 761. Using the Livestrong formula suggestion I came up with 639. I dont agree with the Livestrong calculation because it asks you to GUESS your level of effort.

    What I have learned and what I LOVE about my heart rate monitor is that no matter how much I think I am pushing myself, the heart rate doesnt lie. Meaning, I have had workouts where I thought I was KILLING MYSELF lifting, and my heart rate never got over 155. Then there were times where I dont feel like I was under duress and it was around 190. I would err on the side of monitoring my bodys heart rate rather than my perception of workload.

    http://www.livestrong.com/article/451897-how-to-measure-the-calories-burned-by-exercise/

    Just to keep things similar with links to measuring, this is probably a more accurate way to measure calorie burn from an activity. I know my heart rate monitor doesnt measure my V02Max to set a baseline, but I think some out there do?
  • VonTinka
    VonTinka Posts: 89 Member
    Well when i didn't put my weight ect in i was burning 600-700 calories but when i put all my weight ect in it boomed. My heart was almost constantly at 180 never under 175 so i stayed at a high zone. Not sure though i will test it again when i go. I weight around 84 kg or 187 pounds i fluctuate sometimes.
  • eevincheezburger
    eevincheezburger Posts: 163 Member
    Using one of the chest-strap HRMs, I log about 350-600 calories per workout in one hour (depending on what I do)./
  • VonTinka
    VonTinka Posts: 89 Member
    Thats the odd thing...it said i burnt 600-700 on factory settings...not sure what it is o.O
  • what923
    what923 Posts: 100 Member
    I run about 25 miles per week and use a garmin with gps and heart rate monitor. Based on my height, weight and then HR- I trust this to be about as accurate as I can get. Every persons 'zones' as a HR level will be slightly different depending on age and resting HR. Even when I run at 85% hr consistently for an hour I have never seen my average burn go much above 10 calories per minute.
    The only thing I would feel it's not very accurate on is weight lifting because it goes based on HR for aerobic burn but who knows how much extra we burn afterwards and as our muscles repair and rebuild. If you're looking to lose weight then I would err on the low side and underestimate otherwise you may feel like you should be losing more.
    PS I don't believe in using the scale unless you at least measure inches with it and a rough estimate of body fat (caliper tested). Getting healthy is a tricky measurement and not best represented by a number on a scale.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    What kind of HRM do you have? 180 sounds very high...that's pretty much max HR for most unless you are an athlete. If I run a couple of miles at 5 MPH or so, my avg HR is around 140...something seems off here to me. You really shouldn't be working to max HR with frequency, it's not good for you. I would say you should either get your heart checked (possibly high resting HR/Hypertension or verify the accuracy of your HRM somehow...if you're really at 180 or so for average HR, you need to dial that back a bit. Really, you should only work to that level maybe once per week or so.
  • Timshel_
    Timshel_ Posts: 22,834 Member
    How many calories do you burn in the gym?

    Depends on how hot the girls are on the treadmills around me are.
  • imtrinat
    imtrinat Posts: 153 Member
    I burn right under 100 in 10 minutes doing pretty high intensity cardio. I weigh 148.

    Edit: Looking back at my exercise, it looks like I've been hitting right at 560 in an hour if I do only cardio.
  • VonTinka
    VonTinka Posts: 89 Member
    Yeh it's pretty spooky...the machine says my heart rate is 180 too it matches my hrm perfectly too hmm i also suffer from palpitations from time to time. I do have asthma and tend to struggle with breathing through my nose ect...but my asthma isn't really that bad in the gym.
  • RatherBeFishing
    RatherBeFishing Posts: 61 Member
    I have avg'ed a 175 heart for a 50 min workout pushing it really hard the was 973 calories burned if I would have done an hour it would have been around 1179 (just under 20 calories a minute). I am 35 years old my so called max heart rate is 185. Working out up near your maximum heart rate doesn't hurt you at all unless you have health issues, it just makes you burn out quicker. Max heart estimate is 220-age if you want to have an idea what it should be. From the research I have done you can burn up to a max of 20 calories a minute if you are working out really hard 95-99% of max heart rate.

    http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/exercise/SM00109 Calories burned at hour
  • zoedicko
    zoedicko Posts: 50 Member
    i usually burn 600 calories. i do 15 minutes on the cross trainer level 7, 10 mins on the rowing machine, 15 minutes on the bike level 8 and then 12 minutes on the treadmill incline2.5 and speed 3.9 for 12 minutes, then run on treadmill incline2.0 and speed 5.2 for 6 minutes. then i will do weights for 15 minutes
  • carrieous
    carrieous Posts: 1,024 Member
    between 300-500. Yesterday I burned about 500 running 3.5 miles and lifting weights for 20+ mins. I was in the gym for over an hour
  • GodzillaR35
    GodzillaR35 Posts: 73 Member
    40 minutes Eliptical,i weigh 240lb,heart rate always over 150 i lose 550 calories consistently
  • jzammetti
    jzammetti Posts: 1,956 Member
    Increased body weight makes you burn more calories than a smaller person - I don't know your weight, but I see a large goal on your ticker, so maybe this is part of it. Plus, even if you sat around for that hour, you would have burned calories. The HRM tracks all caloreis burned for the hour. So, the exercise wasn't all of the calories, some were just normal bodily fnction calories.

    Example: for me, I wore my HRM for three days and averaged the number of daily calories to see my actual tdee - it averages a little over 2100 a day (which equals 88 per hour). So when my HRM says I burned 430 calories during a workout I subract the 88 to get my exercise caloreis (342).

    have you tried the wear it for three days to get your average?
  • 50 minute on treadmill, walking/jogging / sprinting (500) on average then weights total to about 600 when I go on a serious day otherwise it's 35min for a 5k on the treadmill and half hour weights (400)