01-21-2015 05:28
01-21-2015 05:28
I just got the charge hr and was very excited to use it on my workout this morning. My main exercise is and elliptical. It's a few yrs old but counts calories and heart rate on its own. my elliptical says in a 60 min workout I burned 1166 calories and my charger says I burned 798. these are vastly different numbers so how do i know what is right?
01-21-2015 06:29
01-21-2015 06:29
1100 seems high. Perhaps the eliptical is not taking weight into account and FB is? A generic formula I found is 400 calories per 30 minutes for a 185lb adult. So unless you weigh more and/or are going at an extreme rate at a high resistance, 800 calories sounds closer to reality than 1100.
01-21-2015 08:44 - edited 01-21-2015 08:45
01-21-2015 08:44 - edited 01-21-2015 08:45
It's my understanding that the elliptical will go off of just an average number.
1100 calories for 60 minutes is EXTREMELY high for a simple cardio workout. On average, an individual burns ABOUT 10 calories per minute for a cardiovascular workout. So, 60 x 10 would be 600 calories. Depending on your weight, and how long you kept your HR elevated 750-800 sounds resonable, but still a bit high.
I would be more apt to believe the FB calories than to believe the elliptical.
01-21-2015 08:47
01-21-2015 08:47
Does your elliptical "know" your age, gender, weight and height? Fitbit knows, and that's how it's figuring out how you burn calories.
Dominique | Finland
Ionic, Aria, Flyer, TrendWeight | Windows 7, OS X 10.13.5 | Motorola Moto G6 (Android 9), iPad Air (iOS 12.4.4)
Take a look at the Fitbit help site for further assistance and information.
01-21-2015 08:56
01-21-2015 08:56
@RHIANNA wrote:My main exercise is and elliptical.
What happens if you log your workout on the elliptical as an activity in your Fitbit account, with the appropriate intensity (you can choose from three levels):
How many calories would you then get? This would definitely be more accurate than what the elliptical gives you. You can also compare it to what your Charge HR calculated.
Dominique | Finland
Ionic, Aria, Flyer, TrendWeight | Windows 7, OS X 10.13.5 | Motorola Moto G6 (Android 9), iPad Air (iOS 12.4.4)
Take a look at the Fitbit help site for further assistance and information.
01-21-2015 09:03
01-21-2015 09:03
@Dominique wrote:
@RHIANNA wrote:My main exercise is and elliptical.
What happens if you log your workout on the elliptical as an activity in your Fitbit account, with the appropriate intensity (you can choose from three levels):
How many calories would you then get? This would definitely be more accurate than what the elliptical gives you. You can also compare it to what your Charge HR calculated.
Agreed with this^^
Just as a side note, there is no possible way (unless you are absolutely sprinting the ENTIRE 60 minutes, and are considerably overweight) that an individual burns almost 1200 calories. I feel like your elliptical is tricking you 😞
01-21-2015 23:01
01-21-2015 23:01
Ellipticals have so many variables that effect how a person can do them - that there are no studies that have provided a reliable formula for calculating calorie burn.
Each manufacturer is going off their own or public domain data.
So HR data is best estimate between those choices.
Unlike treadmills and cycle-ergometers that have been the main test bed in research studies, and have formulas more accurate than HRM's actually.
And that's actually a good way to do it.
Find your average HR doing the elliptical how you normally would.
Then do a treadmill at whatever pace and incline is needed to produce the same HR.
The calories for that effort are as close as you'll get to the elliptical.
http://www.exrx.net/Calculators/WalkRunMETs.html
01-21-2015 23:04
01-21-2015 23:04
Actually, it's not that hard to hit 1000 cal/hr burns if decently fit.
Now, maybe not for the whole hour unless really fit, but not impossible at all.
You wouldn't even have to be sprinting. 10 cal/min is really a low-medium workout once you gotten past the stage of just starting to do cardio.
What speed running would you hit a 1000/hr by a very accurate formula?
Use the Gross option, as that's what Fitbit and HRM and database would report.
http://www.exrx.net/Calculators/WalkRunMETs.html
01-23-2015 11:35
01-23-2015 11:35
Also varies on your stride setting and making sure your Fitbit is set to the Dominant/Non-Dominant Hand.
I have my Stride set to 2 feet walking and 4 feet running. And the Fitbit set to Dominant Hand (right handed).