Kettle bells

sjb190369
sjb190369 Posts: 2 Member
edited November 2024 in Fitness and Exercise
Hi everyone I have done a kettle bells class this morning but can't find it to log the calories etc, I am doing kettle cardio on Thursday too so any ideas what I can put down for them please? Thanks

Replies

  • CyberTone
    CyberTone Posts: 7,337 Member
    Depending on how you are using the kettlebell as a piece of equipment while performing an exercise activity, you could log it under cardiovascular using "Strength training (weight lifting, weight training)" or "Circuit training, general" to get an estimate of Calories burned. Please note that the estimated Calories burned for cardiovascular exercises provided by MFP are based on published metabolic equivalent of tasks (METs), which are estimates for a general population and may differ for you as an individual.

    The Compendium of Physical Activities has a new activity with an estimated METs of 9.8 for Kettlebell workout from a study comparing kettlebell workout with treadmill running.

    You could use any one of the pre-loaded exercises with a similar METs value. The METs factors provide estimates for a general population and an individual user's Calorie burn rate may be different.

    METs - Activity

    3.0 - Strength training (weight lifting, weight training)
    8.0 - Circuit training, general
    8.5 - Aerobics, step, with 6-8 inch step
    9.0 - Running, 5.2 mph (11.5 min/mile)
    9.0 - Running, cross country
    9.8 - Running, 6.0 mph (10.0 min/mile)
    10.0 - Aerobics, step, with 10-12 inch step
  • sjb190369
    sjb190369 Posts: 2 Member
    Thank you :)
  • TonyB0588
    TonyB0588 Posts: 9,520 Member
    CyberTone wrote: »
    Depending on how you are using the kettlebell as a piece of equipment while performing an exercise activity, you could log it under cardiovascular using "Strength training (weight lifting, weight training)" or "Circuit training, general" to get an estimate of Calories burned. Please note that the estimated Calories burned for cardiovascular exercises provided by MFP are based on published metabolic equivalent of tasks (METs), which are estimates for a general population and may differ for you as an individual.

    As the Kettle Bells come in different weights, how do you tweak the above advice to accommodate this??
This discussion has been closed.