Thinking Body Bugg

mebuthalf
mebuthalf Posts: 167 Member
edited October 6 in Health and Weight Loss
Anyone have one or any thoughts on it?

Replies

  • I got a Bodybugg v3 for Christmas and I love it so far. It's great for tracking calories burned and see what activities during the day caused you to burn the most. I just wish there was a way to import the Bodybugg data into myfitnesspal app.
  • sunflower_yogi
    sunflower_yogi Posts: 78 Member
    i used to have a BodyMedia Fit (very similar to Body Bugg), but sold it on eBay. it would consistently say my average burn was anywhere from 2600-3000+, yet there was no way i could eat 2000 cals and lose -- let alone 2200-2300 (to have a smaller deficit since my goal is to lose less than 10 pounds). there is a reported 10%+/- variance on the data it reports. i also didn't like how big it was. it was hard to conceal and was definitely a conversation starter in group yoga/exercise classes.

    a lot of people really like them. it just didn't work out for me.
  • mommamindi
    mommamindi Posts: 256 Member
    I am interested as well...
  • courtgosvener
    courtgosvener Posts: 66 Member
    I got mine for Christmas when it was on sale. i love it so far. the first few days i was a little depressed, but that was because I expected my sedentary burn to be higher! lol...But if i do simple things like going to the grocery store or walmart i usually burn and extra 200 which is totally nice. i can only imagine what i burn when i exercise! hahaha... i have yet to really put that to the test though..hehe..I did Just Dance and burned like 100 calories in 2 songs going 110% trying to burn a few extra! lol I personally think its a solid investment for anyone wanting to lose weight. I have yet to have an official full week weigh in with it though. I wasn't counting calories the 2 days after Christmas and of course decided to have a free day tonight. But will be hard core after the first of the year.
  • bcampbell54
    bcampbell54 Posts: 932 Member
    In general, I am satisfied with the appliance, and the software seems to have settled down.
    I don't like tracking meals with their site, as I don't want to buy their shakes and supplements, or whatever the hell they're trying to sell.
    The MFP database is vast and flexible, so I use this for meals, and either enter or fact scheck my burn info with the BodyBugg. It costs about $10 a month, but that's about a days worth of smokes in my former life, so what the hey?
    It seems to be very accurate.
    They offered a free "consultation" with the purchase. I declined, but if you feel confident about beating any sales pitch (I suspected that's what it might be), I think it might be worthwhile, just to make sure you have it all set up correctly.
  • Jazzyjules71
    Jazzyjules71 Posts: 150 Member
    bump- I'd love to hear future opinions that surface.......
  • courtgosvener
    courtgosvener Posts: 66 Member
    I personally haven't tracked food on their site either. i found it a little cumbersome. And i have found something I like in MFP. Essentially I am paying for the tracking service and not using it, but my dad gave me the gift and I figure it would be awesome to be Goal weight in a years time, which he got the12 month membership with the BB. it was on sale and I found a coupon online that made it super awesome.

    They have my 'goal' burn at 2600 cals a day. I am 265 5 foot 5 28 year old female. The first few days (i was sick and still sort of am) i was barely getting 2300 sedentary. I put in sedentary just so I could see the base and that's where the 2600 came from. I have been reaching the goal more since i have felt better. MFP has my caloric intake at 1420 calories. Which if the BB is correct and i get to that goal my deficit would be 1200. now that is not totally crazy, but i am a girl that likes to eat, so i am going to see how it works to eat back 200 exercise calories and see if i still lose the 2 lbs per week. it would be ideal to lose more than 3 lbs a week stuff like that, but i don't want to go too crazy since I find if I restrict a lot and try to have too high a deficit i go nuts and set myself up to binge eat later. So 2lbs a week for 52 weeks a year is definitely goal weight. But we shall see how the cookie crumbles!

    The year membership i essentially got for free( since it was a gift) is totally worth it to me. I am finally serious about my weight loss journey. I have about 98 pounds to hit my h.s. weight, which is my goal weight. If I want to lose more then i will go for it, but for now I am happy with that.
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
    Used BodyMedia (maker of BodyBugg and SenseWear) for 4 months. Was always disappointed how inaccurate it was for intense workouts, no where near what HRM and sites estimated for that level of effort - which is much more accurate.

    Was disappointed when I compared some equal run distances between the cool gym treadmill with fan blowing on me and medium HR, to outside in July 100 F heat with hills and much higher HR. Distance was the same. Website estimated the same calorie burn, and well below estimate from actual HR.

    Was disappointed twice when I forgot to put unit on, and because the "sweat" sensor touched the band where I laid it, it thought it was on-body the whole day. Meaning the website does NOT let you manually input ANY estimates of use. Company confirmed that problem can happen.

    Was disappointed and really researched the accuracy claim after an 8 hr day of chainsawing down some trees in the backyard in the fall. Wasn't sweating, no high HR. But arms were of course swinging like crazy the whole time, besides vibrating from the chainsaw. I receive a calorie burn per minute 3-4 times what the most intense exercise had ever given me.

    The proved to me:
    The "sweat" sensor is nothing more than on-body sensor. It can't tell the difference between amount of sweat and how that relates to activity level.
    The heat sensor is not used. Perhaps not yet, but obviously not in calculations. Besides, how is the heat in 1/4 sq in going to be meaningful? Several nights of sleeping warm did not increase the nightly cal/min estimate.
    The motion sensors are great for pedometer type exercise, not much else. Glorified, but useful, pedometer.

    But expensive monthly pedometer. Wish I'd gotten the FitBit for the exact same type of inaccuracies, but you can manually add in your exercise and no monthly fee.

    There program does indeed work though. You accurately log your foods, the unit underestimates your exercise. So even if you are not accurate on food logging, you are covered. And weight loss is about guaranteed.

    In researching their claim to accuracy found the following study which explained so much to me. Until they allow you to pinpoint what your workout was, they cannot used these exercise-specific algorithms.
    Oh, they recently added the ability to import Garmin and some other HRM makers HR data for a workout.
    Haven't done it, but from the instructions and screen shots, HR is still not taken into account to estimate calories. But at least they are getting closer with that step. Which will prove right then - they know they can't do it as accurately.

    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15126727

    When a generalized proprietary algorithm was applied to the data, the SenseWear Pro Armband significantly underestimated total energy expenditure by 14.9 +/- 17.5 kcal (6.9 +/- 8.5%) during walking exercise, 32.4 +/- 18.8 kcal (28.9 +/- 13.5%) during cycle ergometry, 28.2 +/- 20.3 kcal (17.7 +/- 11.8%) during stepping exercise, and overestimated total energy expenditure by 21.7 +/- 8.7 kcal (29.3 +/- 13.8%) during arm ergometer exercise (P < or = 0.001). At the request of the investigators, exercise-specific algorithms were developed by the manufacturer and applied to the data that resulted in nonsignificant differences in total energy expenditure between indirect calorimetry and the SenseWear Pro Armband of 4.6 +/- 18.1 kcal (2.8 +/- 9.4%), 0.3 +/- 11.3 kcal (0.9 +/- 10.7%), 2.5 +/- 18.3 kcal (0.9 +/- 11.9%), and 3.2 +/- 8.1 kcal (3.8 +/- 9.9%) for the walk, cycle ergometer, step, and arm ergometer exercises, respectively.
  • Kksd605
    Kksd605 Posts: 74 Member
    I bought the Fitbit for X-mas. So far I really like it. Best comparison is that you can put the fitbit in your pocket and don't have to wear it on the arm. Tracks steps (distance), flights of stairs, calories burned, and sleep patterns. About half the price of body bugg... I caught a sale at Best Buy for $79 (Fitbit Ultra).
  • mebuthalf
    mebuthalf Posts: 167 Member
    Thank you all for your input ... I think I'll save the $150-200 right now, maybe get one if a plateau really bad again :)

    I was curious how the Fitbit could be accurate for counting calories burned when you put it in your pocket ... does it seem to be accurate? And how?
  • heybales
    heybales Posts: 18,842 Member
    I was curious how the Fitbit could be accurate for counting calories burned when you put it in your pocket ... does it seem to be accurate? And how?

    Because they both have 3-axis motion sensors, so it doesn't matter where it's at for walking so much.
    But, the arm is worthless for anything where your arms don't move. Bike, spin bike, stair stepper where you hold on and don't swing arms, ect - all will be under reported.
    The fitbit sensing hip motion can be more accurate on some of those, still not bike. And if you put it on your leg, you over estimate calories and steps.

    Being 3-axis, it also can pay attention to how much you move around during the night.

    The BodyMedia/BodyBugg is said to get more accurate after estimating your BMR the same way any other calculator does.
    But you know where you select option of sedentary, active, very active, ect? You do the same thing here. And it uses that for a bit. But after truly watching your activity it re-estimates what your BMR is. So instead of just 4 levels or ranges of BMR for your age, weight, height, it can do infinite ranges.
    FitBit does the same thing. Initial estimate on what you tell it, then tweak it for amount of activity you really seem to be doing.
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