Calories Burned Shooting?
Replies
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quiksylver296 wrote: »Here is more scientific answer I just found:
https://www.medicaldaily.com/addicted-guns-heres-how-using-firearm-affects-your-biology-410542
The author is decided pro-gun control, but the details a host of benefits to firing a gun:
"In addition to a flood of hormones, shooting a gun can also burn calories — a surprising amount. For example, the average 130-pound shooter will burn about 148 calories per hour at the shooting range, while heavier shooters clocking in at around 205 pounds can burn as many as 233 calories an hour."
Although this is a crazy 9-year-old zombie thread...
Wouldn't a 130-pound couch sitter also burn about 148 calories per hour?!? That's a really small burn over an hour.
Oooh. Let's argue in a zombie thread
BMR of a 215 lb man (me) is ~1950 per day or about 81 per hour (just BMR). a 5'4" female at 130 has a BMR of ~1275 or about 53 per hour. Neat for a couch sitter would add ~20%.0 -
Tacklewasher wrote: »quiksylver296 wrote: »Here is more scientific answer I just found:
https://www.medicaldaily.com/addicted-guns-heres-how-using-firearm-affects-your-biology-410542
The author is decided pro-gun control, but the details a host of benefits to firing a gun:
"In addition to a flood of hormones, shooting a gun can also burn calories — a surprising amount. For example, the average 130-pound shooter will burn about 148 calories per hour at the shooting range, while heavier shooters clocking in at around 205 pounds can burn as many as 233 calories an hour."
Although this is a crazy 9-year-old zombie thread...
Wouldn't a 130-pound couch sitter also burn about 148 calories per hour?!? That's a really small burn over an hour.
Oooh. Let's argue in a zombie thread
BMR of a 215 lb man (me) is ~1950 per day or about 81 per hour (just BMR). a 5'4" female at 130 has a BMR of ~1275 or about 53 per hour. Neat for a couch sitter would add ~20%.
So, if the couch-sitter were standing instead of sitting? Then where does she end up?0 -
quiksylver296 wrote: »Tacklewasher wrote: »quiksylver296 wrote: »Here is more scientific answer I just found:
https://www.medicaldaily.com/addicted-guns-heres-how-using-firearm-affects-your-biology-410542
The author is decided pro-gun control, but the details a host of benefits to firing a gun:
"In addition to a flood of hormones, shooting a gun can also burn calories — a surprising amount. For example, the average 130-pound shooter will burn about 148 calories per hour at the shooting range, while heavier shooters clocking in at around 205 pounds can burn as many as 233 calories an hour."
Although this is a crazy 9-year-old zombie thread...
Wouldn't a 130-pound couch sitter also burn about 148 calories per hour?!? That's a really small burn over an hour.
Oooh. Let's argue in a zombie thread
BMR of a 215 lb man (me) is ~1950 per day or about 81 per hour (just BMR). a 5'4" female at 130 has a BMR of ~1275 or about 53 per hour. Neat for a couch sitter would add ~20%.
So, if the couch-sitter were standing instead of sitting? Then where does she end up?
Taller??
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If you invest in a heart rate monitor, you will know exactly how many calories you burn doing anything. A lot of people on here rave about the Polar F6. I have the Polar FT4 which was $100 through my gym.
You could invest a lot less than $100 in a set of dice.
How many heart beats are there in a calorie?3 -
I'm late to this thread, but the ones that think shooting does not burn calories obviously do not shoot weapons. And to the super rude FrnkLft, the time under tension that your muscles sustain while shooting using correct shooting fundamentals most definitely qualifies as calories burned. You clearly feel macho without ever shooting a gun. It's not "just standing there." Ever heard of yoga? Just because it doesn't involve rapid movement, does not mean it does not test muscle stamina and strength or burn calories. If you didn't have a helpful answer, why even comment?1
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Calories burned while standing and shooting a pistol.... :noway: Don't give yourself so much credit, the gun is the one doing the work.
Did you look up how many calories you burn just standing there without the pistol? If someone's sedentary TDEE is 2,000, then that would be 83 calories right there. So...
Not EVERY activity, no matter how outdoorsy it is, how macho it makes you feel, or how much it makes you sweat because it's hot or marginally stressful, counts as exercise.
The calories burned come from working the muscles with sufficient intensity over time, not from simply doing an activity or feeling like you're doing work.
Please. Think.
Competitive shooting (as she's clarified is what she's doing) involves running/sprinting from one shooting position to the next.
It isn't just standing and shooting a pistol.1 -
deluxmary2000 wrote: »This is a strange thread to necromance.
Ah crud...zombies got me.0 -
Sporting clays taking a golf cart from station to station, 5 Stand, Trap...I have to go with "I wouldn't log this"
I have done some defensive handgun - rifle - and shotgun training where I would log it as maybe like a walk at 2 mph...but dropping to a knee, firing, and rising back up (freaking lunges!) - that counts0 -
The Presidents Challege tracker, which is managed by the University of Indiana, lists one hour of trap and skeet shooting as earning 145 points. Their website states points are nearly equal to calories burned. That should be a pretty close approximation.
It has to be different from just standing around. My shotgun is around 8 or 9 pounds. Shooting International Trap, I would mount it 25 times in about 20 minutes, and walk from station to station in between. It may not be much but it's more than just steps.0 -
NorthCascades wrote: »If you invest in a heart rate monitor, you will know exactly how many calories you burn doing anything. A lot of people on here rave about the Polar F6. I have the Polar FT4 which was $100 through my gym.
You could invest a lot less than $100 in a set of dice.
How many heart beats are there in a calorie?
I have a resting heart rate of roughly 60 beats per minute, and my estimated sedentary TDEE is 1512 calories, so that would be 3600 heartbeats per 63 calories, or 57.1 heartbeats per calorie at rest.
(Edited because I re-checked the estimated sedentary TDEE, and it wasn't what I remembered...)
While running, I have a heart rate of roughly 165 beats per minute, and burn 681 calories (gross) per hour. That gives me 14.5 heartbeats per calorie while running.
This seems to indicate that at the very least, the number of heartbeats per calorie is not fixed. While I recognize that there is some sort of correlation between heart rate and calorie estimates during steady-state exercise, I wouldn't suggest attempting to calculate one based on the other.0
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