Vibration trainers
jeslz
Posts: 49 Member
What are people’s thoughts on vibration trainers?
I got one as a gift and I’m enjoying using it so far. I’ve heard a lot of good things from others that have used them but I know the research on them is inconclusive at best.
So, thoughts?
I got one as a gift and I’m enjoying using it so far. I’ve heard a lot of good things from others that have used them but I know the research on them is inconclusive at best.
So, thoughts?
2
Replies
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What are you hoping to achieve by using it?
There are a couple of threads on these things already if you use the search facility.
If you're looking to burn calories, you'd be far better going for a walk in my opinion or doing some bodyweight exercises, neither requiring any equipment but both proven to have benefits.5 -
Didn't work back then, don't work now.
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Yup. If it's touted to be really easy or quick or 'cheating' it usually does nothing for you in the long run. This applies equally to fad diets, magic pills *and* exercise gimmicks.
Everyone is looking for shortcuts. I don't know of any that work that don't also come with some pretty serious consequences.
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Glad it was a gift and you didn't spend any money on it.12
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I thought this was going to be about something else...
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My parents bought one of these and it cracks me up what people are willing to believe will help them lose weight.
My mom also jumped on the "keto will help with everything" fad diet
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I think there is some evidence of using vibration platforms for bone and tendon injury healing.
Weight loss, strength, hypertrophy, not so much.11 -
quiksylver296 wrote: »Glad it was a gift and you didn't spend any money on it.
I would not want to have to explain the lack of efficacy to the person that spent money on it and gave it to me though. Unless it was re-gifted then I wouldn't care.
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It's worth checking to see if you are meeting any health goals: Are you getting stronger? Are you getting your heart to an aerobic level? Are you getting more flexible? Is your back getting relief?
It would be a pity if you're spending time on this, and not doing anything much to improve your health.3 -
I actually know a guy IRL who is a salesman for these things. He constantly tells people how great they are for losing weight, getting into shape, blah blah blah...but seriously, if you look at the guy, you'd never in a million years think yourself, "wow that dude is fit, I wonder what he does?" So...yeah. And he's the salesman. I'll let you connect the dots.5
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I actually know a guy IRL who is a salesman for these things. He constantly tells people how great they are for losing weight, getting into shape, blah blah blah...but seriously, if you look at the guy, you'd never in a million years think yourself, "wow that dude is fit, I wonder what he does?" So...yeah. And he's the salesman. I'll let you connect the dots.
Stories about half the visits to a GNC...6 -
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They're very good at causing weight loss in wallets and bank accounts.
Completely ineffective for humans though. Except they are weirdly fun to use, efficacy aside.3 -
Wait, do these things literally promise to “shake it off?” .3
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It doesn't help with calorie burn but does help build all the tiny muscle areas that help with balance and core support. I used one in my physical therapists office when my lumbar lordosis got bad enough to cause severe pain. It will do nothing on its own but if you are already working on balancing exercises it adds challenge.3
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magnusthenerd wrote: »I think there is some evidence of using vibration platforms for bone and tendon injury healing.
Weight loss, strength, hypertrophy, not so much.
For tendon injuries, there's some evidence that applying the vibrator directly to the tendon can help with healing. I've got a stubborn case of tendinitis (I'm not lazy enough to let it fully heal 😕) and my doctor/specialist brought it up as an option.2 -
My chiro occasionally uses a big vibrator on my back (It's call the Thumper!) after an adjustment, to help loosen the tense muscles. That's a far cry from using these "Vibration Trainers" in the hopes of somehow increasing calorie burn with no effort.1
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NorthCascades wrote: »magnusthenerd wrote: »I think there is some evidence of using vibration platforms for bone and tendon injury healing.
Weight loss, strength, hypertrophy, not so much.
For tendon injuries, there's some evidence that applying the vibrator directly to the tendon can help with healing. I've got a stubborn case of tendinitis (I'm not lazy enough to let it fully heal 😕) and my doctor/specialist brought it up as an option.snickerscharlie wrote: »My chiro occasionally uses a big vibrator on my back (It's call the Thumper!) after an adjustment, to help loosen the tense muscles. That's a far cry from using these "Vibration Trainers" in the hopes of somehow increasing calorie burn with no effort.
No, my recollection is it being mentioned specifically about vibration platforms because they're a target for mocking in evidence based fitness. I think it was Eric Helms or Brad Schoenfeld mentioning how with context, it isn't even true to dismiss them because while they're worthless for strength or hypertrophy, they have a very narrow benefit, which I think was for tendon issues.
Trying to find research on it, it might be for pain management instead.
Definitely not saying buying them to get ripped. The only ripped you'll get is off.3 -
Took me while to realise that you aren't talking about vibrating footwear 😆1
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This thread is about as disappointing as the so-called “erotic Christmas market” we visited in Hamburg. Titillating in premise, mundane in reality.
Seriously, my mom rented one of those things in the sixties. She was fat then and still fat now. Us kids were the only ones who enjoyed it and only when we weren’t caught.4 -
lol I thought it was talking about trainers i.e. shoes lol0
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