Exercise bike calories vs MFP calories. Help?

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Hi all, just wondering whether anyone can tell me what amount of burned calories I should be going with - what my exercise bike says, or what MFP says when I put in how long I've used the bike for? I usually use the bike for 45 minutes, on an uphill/downhill programme, which tells me I've burned 748 calories, however when putting this into MFP it says I've only burned around 350 calories. Just a bit of a difference there! Anyone have a clue?
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  • MeanderingMammal
    MeanderingMammal Posts: 7,866 Member
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    Personally I'd suggest going with the lower amount, which looks more realistic.

    For comparison I'll do about 500 cals in 60 minutes of training at an average 22-23mph on my turbo trainer.
  • ViolaLeeBlueberry
    ViolaLeeBlueberry Posts: 182 Member
    edited January 2015
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    Yeah, it's a HUGE difference. Ridiculous, really. Apparently exercise bikes are some of the most accurate gym machines, so I'd say go by the gym numbers. That's what I do. Apparently the MFP numbers do actually match up with reality for larger people with a lot to lose, particularly men, but for me (at 5 foot 2 and overweight but not obese) it would be a massive overestimate. I did a bunch of online research before I decided just to go with the gym numbers ... there's not much good that can come of overestimating, LOL!
  • misstmarie__x
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    Yeah, I thought as much. I'd rather underestimate than overestimate :)
  • MeanderingMammal
    MeanderingMammal Posts: 7,866 Member
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    Apparently exercise bikes are some of the most accurate gym machines, so I'd say go by the gym numbers.

    Did you note that the gym machine is the higher figure of the two?

    Gym machines do need to be properly calibrated, and it's worth noting that it's extrapolating from the power generated on the bike, rather than the input energy.


  • dianesheart88
    dianesheart88 Posts: 111 Member
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    The only way to know for sure is to get a HRM and use it. FT4 is inexpensive and accurate. Then you will truly know your calorie burns.
  • claresusan
    claresusan Posts: 121 Member
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    I've noticed a huge discrepancy between the calorie burns, which is why I invested in a HRM heart rate monitor, using a "watch" and chest strap a number of years ago. They are fairly expensive but well worth the cost, as it gives you the most accurate calorie burn. I lost over 50kg's and have maintained the weight loss for a further 2 years.
  • Quasita
    Quasita Posts: 1,530 Member
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    Apparently the MFP numbers do actually match up with reality for larger people with a lot to lose, particularly men

    Where did you get this information? MFP's numbers are grossly inaccurate for those of us big and tall people. MFP would regularly tell me that I burned 1/3-1/2 of the calories my calorimeter would report.

    If it were me, I would average the two for now, but get a device that is specifically made to monitor your individual numbers if you are looking to count calorie burns into your eating trends. Neither are likely to be 100% accurate, but most people tend to go low instead of high. Me, I'd rather just eat a set cut every day and not bother with counting the burn calories until I had a tool that would give me more accurate numbers.
  • MeanderingMammal
    MeanderingMammal Posts: 7,866 Member
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    The only way to know for sure is to get a HRM and use it. FT4 is inexpensive and accurate. Then you will truly know your calorie burns.

    That then depends on the type of session one does :)

    I did a lactate threshold session a week or so ago and ran my HR trace through several different simulators, getting a difference in opinion of up to 50% of the original; somewhere between 600 and 900 cals, with even 600 probably being a bit high.

    A sprint intervals session got an even wider range of discrepancy.
  • ljones27uk
    ljones27uk Posts: 177 Member
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    1000 calories an hour is a HUGE burn, Id suggest its way over-estimated and go for the smaller number. Disappointing I know, but better to err on side of caution eh.. and just think, if the higher number is accurate youll lose more weight quicker! win win! :-)
  • sijomial
    sijomial Posts: 19,811 Member
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    If the exercise bike measures power (typically watts) then they can potentially be accurate - more accurate than a HRM.
    If it doesn't then it's going to be a bit of a lottery.

    However, 748 calories in 45 minutes would be an exceptional amount. Very good club rider perhaps?
    For comparison my highest calorie burn from a calibrated power meter equipped bike is 862 cals in an hour but that was maximal effort to complete exhaustion.

    MFP doesn't have a clue about your fitness, cycling ability or exertion level but of the two estimates it sounds the more likely for the interval program you describe.
  • _mr_b
    _mr_b Posts: 302 Member
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    I think MFP's better to use in this case - unless of course you're really going for it in the gym!

    Just checked my Garmin account and most I've done is around 820cals/hr my average is around 650. MFP may be a little light in this case but like you say, it's best to go with the lower number where exercise is concerned.
  • zipa78
    zipa78 Posts: 354 Member
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    A heart-rate monitor is likely to be the most accurate of the three, but even they can only give you estimates, which is really a fancy word for an educated guess. I find it much easier to just not even try tracking calories burned from exercise and go by an estimated cycle instead and make adjustments on a weekly or monthly basis if things aren't progressing they way I want them to.
  • njmark72
    njmark72 Posts: 99 Member
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    Couple of questions... Does your exercise bike know how much you weigh, how tall you are, if you are a female and accurately gauge your heart rate? If not, it's not accurate. If you can type that stuff in your bike and it has a good heart rate monitor you could get much better numbers.

    Hope this helps!

    Mark
  • ViolaLeeBlueberry
    ViolaLeeBlueberry Posts: 182 Member
    edited January 2015
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    Apparently exercise bikes are some of the most accurate gym machines, so I'd say go by the gym numbers.

    Did you note that the gym machine is the higher figure of the two?

    No, for me, the gym number is quite a bit under the MFP number. (By several hundred "calories burned.") So if I personally went by the MFP number, I'd get to report really cool big "calorie burns" for my news feed, but I'd also possibly be totally wrong.

    I think the best bet in figuring it out (assuming no heart monitor etc) is to do a range of internet research and see what the numbers generally come to (for weight etc) before trusting any numbers. Some people have done that and found that MFP's stationary bike numbers work well for them personally; they don't for me. But everyone has a different body, different gym machines, different goals, different situations and preferences as to what's available and what they'd use, etc etc.

    FWIW, recording the gym machine numbers has worked for me. I've lost steadily and precisely according to the plan, and made goal weight today (WOO HOO!), so whether I've been recording numbers that are "real" or not, it's been working :smile:
  • fenixuk
    fenixuk Posts: 1 Member
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    The Exercise bike with 748 calories is well off there - I use a powermeter for my own bike sessions.
    - My record seems to be around 700 calories in an hour - and trust me - there was no downhill.

    MFP does seem to overestimate calories burned anyway - especially running. Its a pity you can adjust things down automatically ?
  • misstmarie__x
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    Thank you all for your comments/advice, and MASSIVE well done to you Viola for hitting your goal, that's awesome! :D

    I'm just going to go with what MFP says that I've burned and then moniter my progress/weightloss. As I said, I'd rather underestimate than overestimate. I'm 5ft 4 and currently at 140lbs so not obese by any means. I'd like to ideally lose around 20lbs and tone up which hopefully won't take too long using a combination of the bike, various fitness dvd's, dumbells and of course a healthy, balanced diet too.

    Good luck to you all! :)
  • pinkiezoom
    pinkiezoom Posts: 409 Member
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    My HRM always gives much lower readings than machines and MFP! I trust my HRM the most lol x
  • chuck636
    chuck636 Posts: 258 Member
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    Ya 748 seems high.I run 6.5 mph for 30 mins and walk 3.5 for 10 min cool down usually and burn right around 700 and I tip the scales at 265 lbs so I burn a lot faster with more weight, so I'd say 350 sounds more reasonable IMO.
  • misstmarie__x
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    I shall definitely have to invest in a HRM too! :)
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,874 Member
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    Hi all, just wondering whether anyone can tell me what amount of burned calories I should be going with - what my exercise bike says, or what MFP says when I put in how long I've used the bike for? I usually use the bike for 45 minutes, on an uphill/downhill programme, which tells me I've burned 748 calories, however when putting this into MFP it says I've only burned around 350 calories. Just a bit of a difference there! Anyone have a clue?

    When using the MFP method, you want to be conservative. Also, who knows when the last time that bike was calibrated and how many thousands of people have used it.

    Also keep in mind that by and large, it is difficult to burn more than about 10 calories per minute above and beyond your basal calories...and 10 calories per minute is really cranking out some *kitten*....like you can't talk or do anything besides focus on your workout. Most people cannot sustain that level of effort for all that long.

    Using a scale of 5-10 calories per minute, with 5 being a moderately paced walk, most people's steady state activities fall into a moderate level of an 8 or so...at least that is my experience. Of course, this doesn't fully take into account one's weight and other stats, but it is a conservative approach to estimating calorie burn...and it's all an estimate.