Don't believe estimated calorie burn

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I've been working out in some form every day now for 2 weeks. I usually use the Fitness Blender channel on Youtube and do their squat, cardio and ab workouts. In addition, about 3 days a week I walk on the treadmill for about an hour at 3.5 mph. The problem is I never believe that I've burned as many calories as MFP tells me I've burned. Even the Fitness Blender videos have the lowest amount of calories potentially burned and highest, yet I can't even believe I've come near the lower level of calories burned. And I am sure I am doing the exercises mostly correct. I guess I feel that if I'm not sweating super hard and unable to even walk I haven't burned 100 calories. BUT I do have a fan blasting when I do those workouts... Maybe I am in denial.

I'm currently 122 pounds, 5'3 and my estimated calorie burn walking at 3.5 mph for an hour on a treadmill is over 200 everywhere I look it up. For some reason I just can't believe I burn that much. I've probably looked at 10 different websites, as well as MFP's estimate yet I still can't believe it. Am I thinking too much into this or do I have reason to constantly doubt?
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Replies

  • BrianSharpe
    BrianSharpe Posts: 9,248 Member
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    Runners World formula for net calories (ie calories directly attributed to the activity performed) burned walking:

    .30 x weight (in lbs) x distance (in miles)

    so..........30 x 122 x 3.5 = 128.1 net calories expended

    (still an approximation, the only way to know with certainty is to go to a performance lab and be tested but I suspect the RW formula - which is based on testing a reasonable number of subjects - is close enough)
  • Zx14chick
    Zx14chick Posts: 255 Member
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    From what I can tell from your message, you aren't using a heart rate monitor or anything like that to measure, correct, but you are going off MFP's "estimate." I wear my heart rate monitor when I work out and sometimes I'm over and sometimes I'm under MFP's calculation, so I use my monitor.
  • gimpygramma
    gimpygramma Posts: 383 Member
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    I just tried Brian's formula and it showed I had burned 246 calories walking 6.56 miles. My Fitbit gave me credit for 311 calories. I will be watching this thread to hear what others have found.
  • _Terrapin_
    _Terrapin_ Posts: 4,301 Member
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    Holy guacamole; here I've ben providing a rule of thumb i.e. guideline of 1 mile=100 calories whether it's walking or running. Brian, which Runner's World month and year please.
  • nordeast_yah
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    If you want one that's way out of whack, look at "judo, karate, kick boxing tae kwan do."

    It's giving me 1174 calories for 60 minutes.

    Now don't get me wrong, judo practice is tough, but it's not 1174 calories worth of tough.

    I generally put myself down for 500-800 depending on how many rounds I fight, but yeah -- MFP has some really miscalibrated stuff for cardio.
  • favoritenut
    favoritenut Posts: 217 Member
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    bump
  • meaganmna
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    I wear my HR monitor for all of the activities that I can, and my calorie burn is usually a lot lower than what MFP would estimate for my size. I trust the HR monitor and recommend investing in one of those! Mine doesn't work while swimming, so I use MFP's estimates for that, but I'm guessing they're a bit high...
  • BrianSharpe
    BrianSharpe Posts: 9,248 Member
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    Holy guacamole; here I've ben providing a rule of thumb i.e. guideline of 1 mile=100 calories whether it's walking or running. Brian, which Runner's World month and year please.

    Here's a link to the article...........

    http://www.runnersworld.com/weight-loss/how-many-calories-are-you-really-burning?page=single
  • _Terrapin_
    _Terrapin_ Posts: 4,301 Member
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    If you want one that's way out of whack, look at "judo, karate, kick boxing tae kwan do."

    It's giving me 1174 calories for 60 minutes.

    Now don't get me wrong, judo practice is tough, but it's not 1174 calories worth of tough.

    I generally put myself down for 500-800 depending on how many rounds I fight, but yeah -- MFP has some really miscalibrated stuff for cardio.

    Right, but the cool thing is you can customize your numbers; best of luck.
  • QuietBloom
    QuietBloom Posts: 5,413 Member
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    If you use MFP estimates, best to reduce them by 50 to 75% as they don't seem to differentiate between GROSS and NET burned calories.
  • SaberEsPoder
    SaberEsPoder Posts: 130 Member
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    I think you're right...I finally got a heart rate monitor and I typically burn less than HALF what MFP says :( An HRM would be a good investment, or maybe only log a certain % of the calories as another person recommended.
  • _Terrapin_
    _Terrapin_ Posts: 4,301 Member
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    Holy guacamole; here I've ben providing a rule of thumb i.e. guideline of 1 mile=100 calories whether it's walking or running. Brian, which Runner's World month and year please.

    Here's a link to the article...........

    http://www.runnersworld.com/weight-loss/how-many-calories-are-you-really-burning?page=single

    Thanks Brian. Calorie burn versus net calorie burn at the end of the article is where the discrepancy was for me. As much cardio as we do I found walking 5 mph (and no I do not walk this quickly) burns more calories then running at 5 mph. Be well.
  • Commander_Keen
    Commander_Keen Posts: 1,179 Member
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    get a good HRM.
  • fsucrack
    fsucrack Posts: 68 Member
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    I have found that it really depends what machine I am doing and were I am at. My treadmil at home is not accurate with MFP, but I always rely on my HRM to give me accurate calorie burn.
  • moveitserenity
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    Recommendations for good HRMs, please?
  • WalkingAlong
    WalkingAlong Posts: 4,926 Member
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    A rough estimate of what you burn is your body weight in pounds for every 30 minutes of exercise. If you weigh 120, then maybe 240 an hour for (harder than walking 3.5mph) exercise. If you weigh 300, maybe 600 an hour.
  • typicallyjazzy
    typicallyjazzy Posts: 41 Member
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    Thanks everyone :) I'll definitely look into getting a heart rate monitor. I want to be as accurate as I can. I'm down to my last 2 pounds and don't want to mess anything up.

    Soo I'm looking at around 130 calories burned for an hour walk at 3.5 mph. Guess I have to up it a bit for more of a burn :/
  • MoreBean13
    MoreBean13 Posts: 8,701 Member
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    A rough estimate of what you burn is your body weight in pounds for every 30 minutes of exercise. If you weigh 120, then maybe 240 an hour for (harder than walking 3.5mph) exercise. If you weigh 300, maybe 600 an hour.

    Nope. I weigh 145 and I can run 6.5-7 miles in an hour. 290 calories is WAY off. You can't make generalizations about exercise without taking in to account level of effort.
  • fleetzz
    fleetzz Posts: 962 Member
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    A rough estimate of what you burn is your body weight in pounds for every 30 minutes of exercise. If you weigh 120, then maybe 240 an hour for (harder than walking 3.5mph) exercise. If you weigh 300, maybe 600 an hour.

    This does not take into account intensity so can be off by too much. I wouldn't use this.

    Good heart rate monitors: polar monitors with a chest strap. I have the RS100, many people like the FT4. My sister has a fancy one that cost a ton and syncs with a web site and gives her pretty graphs. But get one with a chest strap, one that you can enter your age, gender, weight, height, resting heart rate and max heart rate, or even better, is able to calculate those along with your V02max (mine can't, but still works well).

    I am sure there are other good heart rate monitors out there, others can comment on this.
  • runner359
    runner359 Posts: 90 Member
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    Runners World formula for net calories (ie calories directly attributed to the activity performed) burned walking:

    .30 x weight (in lbs) x distance (in miles)

    so..........30 x 122 x 3.5 = 128.1 net calories expended

    (still an approximation, the only way to know with certainty is to go to a performance lab and be tested but I suspect the RW formula - which is based on testing a reasonable number of subjects - is close enough)

    This is correct. Old school thinking was walking and running burned the same amount. But revised estimates now estimate in accordance with this formula. Lots of places still have the old formula but the reason running burns more calories is that you are actually propelling yourself off the ground when you run. When you walk one foot is always on the ground.