Trusting calories burnt
SimonT181
Posts: 49 Member
I have my daily calorie intake set and have been trying to work out at least once a day. I run on a treadmill and use the C25K app and I guess it just tries to guess the calories burnt and then puts it in to MFP but the treadmill list a different value as I guess it know the speed I run/walk at but it does not know my weight. So I am not sure who's calorie count to use. I also used my wife's elliptical trainer today and just had to go with its count of calories burnt.
So do I need to take these results with a pinch of salt ? is there a better way to track what I am burning ?
So do I need to take these results with a pinch of salt ? is there a better way to track what I am burning ?
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Replies
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I use my Heart Rate Monitor (HRM) to calculate my cardio calories burned.
Gym Machines indicators are very inaccurate. MFP numbers always overestimate. I do not trust either.
Only eat back a percentage of any calorie burned indicator.
Good luck in your healthy journey0 -
Acrually its a myth hat all gym machines or MFP is inaccurate or that HRMs are the most reliable method.0
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Yes, only a HRM comes close to accurate as today's technology can. Do not trust gym machines or MFP estimates.0
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It's been good enough for me to lose more than 100lbs. We can talk about theory or we can talk about what works. It's up to you OP.
Doesnt really prove anything. Did you lose your weight just down to exercise or was it more because you reduced the amount you ate? Are you saying that HRMs are good for recording calorie burns for everything? Plenty of people get along fine using MFP 50% and adjust or machine readings and adjusting. Plenty of people report using 100%. Seems its quite possible to get by withoput a hrm and lose weight.0 -
Cardio machines are often fitness tested on men, and very fit ones at that, which can throw off the averages on which the calories burns are based. Here's an article from Spark People
Http://www.sparkpeople.com/resource/fitness_articles.asp?id=1370
I prefer my hrm and my fitness tracker. Comparing those two, I feel, is more accurate than the cardio machines or MFP.0 -
Thanks for your feedback I was looking at a HRM the other day I might just try and get a cheap one for now, I don't feel the urge to spend a massive amount and get a wrist based one just yet.0
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I use the Polar FT7 as well and bought it on Amazon. I really like it too.
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I find that my Polar FT4 heart rate monitor is pretty close to the Brayden Calorie Calculator. So, I just average the two and use 80% of that as my conservative burn figure. Hope that helps.0
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Thanks for your feedback I was looking at a HRM the other day I might just try and get a cheap one for now, I don't feel the urge to spend a massive amount and get a wrist based one just yet.
I have a Polar FT4 in green. I love this thing. I wear it as a normal watch. Also comes with a chest strap for heart rate function. Syncs up to any Polar machine, too. I highly recommend it for just $60. It's been great!0 -
Nothing's going to be perfect, but my logging approach (weigh what you can, measure what you can't, generously estimate everything else) combined with my Fitbit Charge HR's estimates seems to be working well. I don't lift, and mostly walk for exercise, so the estimates may be more accurate than most. My CI and CO seem to line up really well.0
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