03-15-2015 13:35 - edited 03-15-2015 13:36
03-15-2015 13:35 - edited 03-15-2015 13:36
03-15-2015 22:49
03-15-2015 22:49
@casimps wrote:
When I log a walk (59 minutes at 3.0mph), I get many more calories burned than when I tracked my walk (which actually was 59m:56s at 3.0mph). Why is there a dramatic difference between tracking (302 calories using my FitBit and the iPhone app tracking) vs. logging the activity (514 calories using the FitBit app's "log exercise" feature).
Which should I be using?
My stats: height 5'4", weight 247.8, age 26, sex F.
Are you sure the distance was the same?
You state 3mph for what you entered manually, but you didn't state the distance that Fitbit saw, though you say 3 mph, which is not a stat it would give.
What was exact distance it used?
And I'm showing 390 calories.
http://www.exrx.net/Calculators/WalkRunMETs.html
Which makes me wonder about that manual logging, because they use the same formula for walking/running calorie burn, it's just they would have taken your resting calorie burn per min x 3.3 METS x 59 min.
You can find your resting calorie burn in the daily graph of steps and calorie burn in 5 min blocks, divided by 5 to get per min burn during sleep or non-moving time.
03-16-2015 10:30
03-16-2015 10:30
@casimps wrote:
When I log a walk (59 minutes at 3.0mph), I get many more calories burned than when I tracked my walk (which actually was 59m:56s at 3.0mph). Why is there a dramatic difference between tracking (302 calories using my FitBit and the iPhone app tracking) vs. logging the activity (514 calories using the FitBit app's "log exercise" feature).
Which should I be using?
My stats: height 5'4", weight 247.8, age 26, sex F.
Because the tracking functionality of your Phone app/gps does not compute the same way as the Fitbit algorithm. Your tracker calculates your energy expenditure by assessing the intensity of your walk minute-by-minute; and, together with your profile characteristics, will generate your caloric burn. The step count reported by the GPS/Phone app will likely also be quite different than what your tracker computed. The other point I would like to make is that you should never have to log a walk if you're wearing your tracker - a simple sync will log automatically log your steps for you. Moreover, if you use the timer functionality of your tracker to capture a specific walk/jog, that event will appear separately on your activity log. Hope this helps. Have a nice day.
TW
(If this tip solved the problem for you, please mark this post solved, as this will be helpful to other users experiencing similar issues.)
03-16-2015 11:20 - edited 03-16-2015 11:21
03-16-2015 11:20 - edited 03-16-2015 11:21
Generally I track my workouts via the watch. The thing is Log Your Workout overrides the data your watch represents more accurately.
Log Your Workout - You did 15 calories every single minute, no slowdowns or speedups.
Track My Workout via watch - More accurate picture with slowdowns and speedups.
After you track your workout, you can categorize the Workout as what your workout is and keep the accuracy.
03-16-2015 19:49 - edited 03-16-2015 20:40
03-16-2015 19:49 - edited 03-16-2015 20:40
03-16-2015 20:53
03-16-2015 20:53
Yes Casimps, just use the timer on your FitBit especially if you want to see information on a specific workout like calories burned....fat burning, peak, cardio etc. It's a great tool, and I suspect (no expert) not all trackers and apps are created equal!! 🙂
Sincerely,
Lovin my Fit!!!