FitBit Seem Stupid?

GoddessLotus
GoddessLotus Posts: 10 Member
edited November 14 in Health and Weight Loss
I purchased the Fitbit Charge HR last weekend and was extremely excited. However, after wearing it for a week, and it seeming like a big waste of my time.. I was wondering if others have had an issue with the device?

It calculates my calories I burn daily and adds that to my caloric intake in MFP every day, so I'm always under my calorie budget. The steps taken are wildly drastic.

Has anyone found a way to incorperate a fitbit and yet find it useful to losing weight with MFP?
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Replies

  • Alluminati
    Alluminati Posts: 6,208 Member
    Unsync it from MFP.
  • CherryChan81
    CherryChan81 Posts: 264 Member
    i am loving it sooo far!!! kinda obsessed with it!
  • GoddessLotus
    GoddessLotus Posts: 10 Member
    I did remove it this morning from MFP. However, if its telling me I'm taking 17k steps a day, and I'm burning 2000 calories without any exercise at all.. it seems almost pointless.

    I am a preschool teacher and my classroom is on the second floor, but I read the average person barely makes 3k steps a day, and a teacher typically 7k. So when I hit 17k, I thought this was a pointless little device. I mean, while driving - I'll gain 300 steps.

    I'm just thinking its a waste and maybe I dont know how to read it or whatever
  • DemoraFairy
    DemoraFairy Posts: 1,806 Member
    I did remove it this morning from MFP. However, if its telling me I'm taking 17k steps a day, and I'm burning 2000 calories without any exercise at all.. it seems almost pointless.

    I am a preschool teacher and my classroom is on the second floor, but I read the average person barely makes 3k steps a day, and a teacher typically 7k. So when I hit 17k, I thought this was a pointless little device. I mean, while driving - I'll gain 300 steps.

    I'm just thinking its a waste and maybe I dont know how to read it or whatever

    Maybe try exchanging it for a different Fitbit. I use the One and find it to be very accurate in terms of knowing when I'm walking or driving/on the train/whatever.
  • kindrabbit
    kindrabbit Posts: 837 Member
    I have fitbit on my phone and it's connected to MFP. Any time my phone is in my pocket I am 'earning' calories. I have no way of knowing if it's wildly inaccurate or not but it hadn't occurred to me that it is. I aim to leave 50% of the exercise calories 'outstanding' at the end of the day, but if I want to eat them I do.

    Do you have it set correctly with your age, sex, height, weight etc?
  • Alluminati
    Alluminati Posts: 6,208 Member
    I did remove it this morning from MFP. However, if its telling me I'm taking 17k steps a day, and I'm burning 2000 calories without any exercise at all.. it seems almost pointless.

    I am a preschool teacher and my classroom is on the second floor, but I read the average person barely makes 3k steps a day, and a teacher typically 7k. So when I hit 17k, I thought this was a pointless little device. I mean, while driving - I'll gain 300 steps.

    I'm just thinking its a waste and maybe I dont know how to read it or whatever

    Maybe try exchanging it for a different Fitbit. I use the One and find it to be very accurate in terms of knowing when I'm walking or driving/on the train/whatever.

    Agree. Maybe yours is defective OP. Call the company and see what's up.
  • GoddessLotus
    GoddessLotus Posts: 10 Member
    Yes. I set it all up correctly.
  • yarwell
    yarwell Posts: 10,477 Member
    I'm not sure the wrist ones are as good at step counting as one clipped to your waist. They are all based on acceleration so shaking your arm or driving will clock up movement.

    3k steps a day is what I do if I stay at home, working in a warehouse for 8 hours got me up to about 30,000 a day. I do about 120 steps a minute when walking, so if you figure out how much time you walk or are on your feet in class it might help reconcile the numbers.

    As it's the HR version your heart rate could be a factor too.
  • SammieePaigee
    SammieePaigee Posts: 2 Member
    Try changing the settings, wear the device on your non-dominate hand but set it to dominate it worked for me. Also, have you set up the 'food plan' its a part of fitbit that helps you lose weight, you need to set it to the same goals you have for MFP :smile:
  • serenity1097
    serenity1097 Posts: 135 Member
    I have the Fitbit One and love it...seems to be very accurate counting steps for me so far!! And I try to only eat back 1/2 my calories just in case it's off a little
  • FitForLife2015
    FitForLife2015 Posts: 20 Member
    I'm getting the Fitbit One, the wrist ones are nowhere near as accurate as they should be.
  • Sued0nim
    Sued0nim Posts: 17,456 Member
    edited March 2015
    Yes. I set it all up correctly.

    as in goals, stride length, time zones, negative adjustments enabled

    Love my fitbit (not the HR one), credit with a lot of my success .. well it's impact on my motivation to move more when not working out.

    I am unconvinced by the HR ones, don't see how the formula can underpin all types of activity like that .. my polar ft hrm with chest strap is designed for steady-state cardio only
  • patrikc333
    patrikc333 Posts: 436 Member
    i've got a charge HR, and looks pretty accurate so far for runs, not as much for walks.

    just remember it is a simple device that detects movements in the smartest way possible, what matters is the trend and not the actual number, and it's not...yourself! so it cannot understand if you are brushing your teeth or hiking for example

    adjust your running/walking stride and you'll see a better estimation of the distance

    set it as dominant arm to be less sensitive

    ignore the extra calories if you think it overestimates
  • GoddessLotus
    GoddessLotus Posts: 10 Member
    I'll give it a week and see if some fine tuning and switching of the arms help.
  • shadow2soul
    shadow2soul Posts: 7,692 Member
    edited March 2015
    I did remove it this morning from MFP. However, if its telling me I'm taking 17k steps a day, and I'm burning 2000 calories without any exercise at all.. it seems almost pointless.

    I am a preschool teacher and my classroom is on the second floor, but I read the average person barely makes 3k steps a day, and a teacher typically 7k. So when I hit 17k, I thought this was a pointless little device. I mean, while driving - I'll gain 300 steps.

    I'm just thinking its a waste and maybe I dont know how to read it or whatever

    The only time this statement applies to me is if I'm home and have my husband do everything (example: c-section recovery when my incision re-opened). I'm a stay-at-home mom and I actually don't get out of my tiny apartment all that often (yes, that's sad, I'm aware of that).


    As for your calorie burn, MFP estimates I burn 1990 without any exercise at all. Fitbit says closer to 2100 which I know to be closer to accurate(based on loss vs intake). Depending on your height, weight and activity level 2000 calories without exercise could very well be very accurate.
  • shadow2soul
    shadow2soul Posts: 7,692 Member
    rabbitjb wrote: »
    Yes. I set it all up correctly.

    as in goals, stride length, time zones, negative adjustments enabled

    Love my fitbit (not the HR one), credit with a lot of my success .. well it's impact on my motivation to move more when not working out.

    I am unconvinced by the HR ones, don't see how the formula can underpin all types of activity like that .. my polar ft hrm with chest strap is designed for steady-state cardio only
    I'm not sure it's used until your HR gets to a certain level. I'm not 100% sure. I know with the non-HR model it was about 200 or so off and now it's only around 50 off (under with both).
  • Alatariel75
    Alatariel75 Posts: 18,209 Member
    I did remove it this morning from MFP. However, if its telling me I'm taking 17k steps a day, and I'm burning 2000 calories without any exercise at all.. it seems almost pointless.

    I am a preschool teacher and my classroom is on the second floor, but I read the average person barely makes 3k steps a day, and a teacher typically 7k. So when I hit 17k, I thought this was a pointless little device. I mean, while driving - I'll gain 300 steps.

    I'm just thinking its a waste and maybe I dont know how to read it or whatever

    I'm an office worker and I hit around 12k a day. I didn't trust it and ran a couple different apps on my phone to calibrate and it turns out I do. 2000 cals a day isn't over the top, it's calculating ALL the calories you burn, for breathing, eating, moving, digesting etc etc

    Mine was overestimating so I wear it on my non-dominant hand and tell it is onmy dominant - that made it more reasonable.
  • sgthaggard
    sgthaggard Posts: 581 Member
    I did remove it this morning from MFP. However, if its telling me I'm taking 17k steps a day, and I'm burning 2000 calories without any exercise at all.. it seems almost pointless.

    I am a preschool teacher and my classroom is on the second floor, but I read the average person barely makes 3k steps a day, and a teacher typically 7k. So when I hit 17k, I thought this was a pointless little device. I mean, while driving - I'll gain 300 steps.

    I'm just thinking its a waste and maybe I dont know how to read it or whatever
    I'm not exactly seeing your issue - are you saying there's no way you walk 17k steps? I'm work in an office and I have little problem hitting 10k steps on work days. If I were on my feet all day, 17k wouldn't be much of a stretch.

  • ncboiler89
    ncboiler89 Posts: 2,408 Member
    Yes. I set it all up correctly.

    Do you have it set (in settings) to your dominate wrist? If so change the setting to your non-dominate wrist.
  • SandyCoils
    SandyCoils Posts: 164 Member
    I have the regular Charge (not HR) and mine is very accurate. I have it synced to MFP and I have it on my non-dominant wrist. It sure as hell subtracts calories if I am not active enough and it will give me calories when I have walked. I have never gotten extra calories or steps from driving - not even playing Wii. I guess it's a good thing I didn't get the HR. This isn't the first time I've read about this happening. Maybe they are basing it off of your HR like a previous poster said.
  • LovingLife_Erin
    LovingLife_Erin Posts: 328 Member
    I have the flex, and find it to be pretty accurate. I've loved mine and have had no issues with it. The 2000 calories burned with no exercise sounds reasonable to me to be honest. If I do nothing all day, even only a thousand or so steps, I burn around 2200. I like that it motivates me to get up and walk to get my steps, and for that alone it is worth it. Mine is synced to mfp and both will give me roughly the same calories to eat for my chosen deficit.
  • JenniferInCt
    JenniferInCt Posts: 431 Member
    I have the charge hr and ive found it highly accurate. Multiple times ive tested it while driving and never ever get an extra step. The only inaccuracy i noticed was when on the treadmill. The hr and calories were almost identical, but the distance was a little short. Im pretty sure thats because i never calibrated my strife length. I wear mine on my non-dominate hand, and made sure its set accurately. Maybe yours is defective?
  • JenniferInCt
    JenniferInCt Posts: 431 Member
    Stride length
  • debrag12
    debrag12 Posts: 1,071 Member
    I have the flex, and find it to be pretty accurate. I've loved mine and have had no issues with it. The 2000 calories burned with no exercise sounds reasonable to me to be honest. If I do nothing all day, even only a thousand or so steps, I burn around 2200. I like that it motivates me to get up and walk to get my steps, and for that alone it is worth it. Mine is synced to mfp and both will give me roughly the same calories to eat for my chosen deficit.

    I burn around 1600 doing little in a day :(
  • Tubbs216
    Tubbs216 Posts: 6,597 Member
    Actually it sounds like it's being quite accurate. I'd re-sync with MFP and see how the next couple of weeks look. FitBit will send you an email report each week and you can compare your weekly calories in/out and exercise and check it against your weight loss. I find that really helpful as I tend to have leaner weekdays to allow for more eating on weekends!
  • jgnatca
    jgnatca Posts: 14,464 Member
    Congratulations, preschool teachers are on their feet more than you thought! You are above average.
  • 49ermama
    49ermama Posts: 4 Member
    I have had an issue I think I created when initially setting up my Charge, accidentally set up my height as 5'11 and I am 5'4 every now and then it reverts back to that and I correct it. I would obviously burn a lot more calories at 5'11.
  • daisyverma
    daisyverma Posts: 234 Member
    I am a little confused. The fitbit shows the sum of all activity...walking, breathing,sleeping etc ? For example a friend of mine does 10,000 steps using their fitbit and it shows over 2000 calories burned. I am thinking that is from everything that person does and also their body movements

    How does one figure out which calories are "exercise" calories and which are "being alive" calories?
  • PrizePopple
    PrizePopple Posts: 3,133 Member
    I've been a teaching assistant for about a month now, and the only reason I've dipped below 10k steps per day recently is because I've been proctoring the MAP testing for half my day. I use Breeze on my phone to track, so I know it's not perfectly accurate. The other day I hit 15,000 steps even with the testing going on. So I'd say that 17,000 steps a day is not totally unreasonable. Milling around a classroom all day and recess time really spikes those numbers. :P
  • GoPerfectHealth
    GoPerfectHealth Posts: 254 Member
    I have the Surge, and I find it to be pretty accurate for counting steps. I would trade your fitbit in for a different one.
This discussion has been closed.