Are exercise calories shown on MFP on the higher side?
lemonginger35
Posts: 38 Member
Should I be entering a lower value? If so, how do I calculate it?
Thanks.
Thanks.
0
Replies
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I always subtract 20% from whatever calories it says I burned. I talked to a trainer at the gym about it one time & he said cardio machines overestimate so 20% is a safe bet. The same might apply to MFP? Easy math is 300 calories x .20 = 60. So I would record 240 calories.
Hope that helps!2 -
The numbers are spot on for me and off for others. They are all just estimates so pick a number, stay consistent and evaluate after four weeks and adjust if needed. Real life numbers are best.3
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It depends on the what for the exercise and the intensity of it. Some estimates seem much closer than others. If you let people know what exercises you are doing, they might be able to suggest a formula or app that gets you close.2
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I always subtract 20% from whatever calories it says I burned. I talked to a trainer at the gym about it one time & he said cardio machines overestimate so 20% is a safe bet. The same might apply to MFP? Easy math is 300 calories x .20 = 60. So I would record 240 calories.
Hope that helps!
Easier calculation: 0.8 x 300 = 240
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longkathleenann9291 wrote: »I always subtract 20% from whatever calories it says I burned. I talked to a trainer at the gym about it one time & he said cardio machines overestimate so 20% is a safe bet. The same might apply to MFP? Easy math is 300 calories x .20 = 60. So I would record 240 calories.
Hope that helps!
Easier calculation: 0.8 x 300 = 240
Says the math teacher.2 -
Hi All, It is just walking or running. What will be the calculation in both cases?0
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lemonginger35 wrote: »Hi All, It is just walking or running. What will be the calculation in both cases?
Walking - .3 x your weight x miles
Running - .63 x your weight x miles
Both of the above are based on a study, and should get you fairly close. Those are for net calories, so they work well if you are tracking with MFP.3 -
Robert,
What about jogging? .45 x weight x miles?0 -
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Robert,
What about jogging? .45 x weight x miles?
Running is essentially running. If both feet are off the ground as you go forward, it's running. There are some exceptions for really fast walking vs normal pace and such, but for the most part it's either feet on the ground of off.
Numbers from a study, which is referenced in the below article that explains some of it....
https://runnersworld.com/nutrition-weight-loss/a20825897/how-many-calories-are-you-really-burning-0/1 -
robertw486 wrote: »lemonginger35 wrote: »Hi All, It is just walking or running. What will be the calculation in both cases?
Walking - .3 x your weight x miles
Running - .63 x your weight x miles
Both of the above are based on a study, and should get you fairly close. Those are for net calories, so they work well if you are tracking with MFP.
I’m assuming the weight is in lbs.
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lemonginger35 wrote: »robertw486 wrote: »lemonginger35 wrote: »Hi All, It is just walking or running. What will be the calculation in both cases?
Walking - .3 x your weight x miles
Running - .63 x your weight x miles
Both of the above are based on a study, and should get you fairly close. Those are for net calories, so they work well if you are tracking with MFP.
I’m assuming the weight is in lbs.
My bad. Yes it's pounds and kcals. IIRC the actual original study they used was all metric based for speeds, as well as usual kJ rather than kCals.0 -
I usually go by the calories Strava gives me for walking and running. Based on the calculations given for running 3 miles Strava gives me an extra 50 calories but for walking 12 miles it gives me an extra 1200 😳. Obviously that calculation doesn’t take into account elevation and speed but that’s still a massive difference.0
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I usually go by the calories Strava gives me for walking and running. Based on the calculations given for running 3 miles Strava gives me an extra 50 calories but for walking 12 miles it gives me an extra 1200 😳. Obviously that calculation doesn’t take into account elevation and speed but that’s still a massive difference.
I know Strava changed some calculations some time back, but something seems way off there. At your size I doubt you would burn 100 calories a mile on anything that any sane person would call a "walk". Maybe a sheer rock cliff at high speed?
The calculator below seems reasonable based on flat surfaces, but I'm not sure how it handles grades. As far as I know it's based on ACSM methods, which were mentioned in the study as being reasonably close.
https://exrx.net/Calculators/WalkRunMETs0
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