07-22-2014 08:45
07-22-2014 08:45
Could someone please explain why the calories count doesn't seem right? One day I walked 6,385 steps, 2.58 miles, no active minutes, 10 floors. Calories burned 2,086. Next day I walked 8,509 steps, 3.44 miles, 1 active minute, 18 floors. Calories burned 1,860. So, doing less burns more calories? Doesn't make sense.
07-24-2014 18:54
07-24-2014 18:54
@LadyBug7 It's so cool to have you in the Community, I'll be more than happy to explain this to you
Since, you mentioned that your calorie burn is just as high or higher on days when you are less active, it may be because you have calorie estimation enabled. Calorie estimation is used when no activities are logged or data is synced.
To disable calorie estimation:
Let me know if that does the trick!
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07-24-2014 20:16
07-24-2014 20:16
Thank you! I disabled it so we'll see what happens. I appreciate your reply....
07-25-2014 09:08
07-25-2014 09:08
@LadyBug7 Sure , let me know if you need further assistance
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07-29-2014 05:15
07-29-2014 05:15
07-29-2014 10:04
07-29-2014 10:04
Hello @missyh Awesome to see you active in the Community!
The calories burned goal that you have set up is different from the calories that you're allow to eat. The calories eaten are based on the Food Plan that you set up plus the calories that you've burned. If you would like to set a calories eaten goal, do the following:
- Go to your Dashboard
- Click the gear icon of Food Plan tile > click on the pen icon
- Click on Food Plan and below the Food Plan options, you'll see "Set my own calorie target"
- Click on "Set my own calorie target" and you'll have that specific number of calories allow to it
Note: When you set your own calorie target, you won't have the option to eat more calories even though you're burning more than usual.
Additionally, the calories burned that you're seeing in the morning are your BMR, perhaps this article might be helpful.
Let me know if I can help you further
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09-06-2014 12:14
09-06-2014 12:14
I've also noticed that my miles walked is only roughly correlated with calories burned. My goal is to burn 3000 calories a day, which can take anywhere from 6 miles to 8 miles to accomplish. At first I found this puzzling. What I have since determined is that when I walk on a smooth sidewalk, it takes more miles to reach my goal of 3000 calories. When I walk on the trails in the woods, with twists and turns, logs, boulders etc, it takes less miles. I believe this is because the fitbit takes it's measurements from an internal accelerometer. It can "feel" these irregular motions, which presumably burn more calories. Fitbit uses proprietary algorithims to calculate calories and does not simply rely on measuring steps taken or miles walked.
09-07-2014 09:48
09-07-2014 09:48
@rightdx Thanks for sharing your experience with us
Fitbit trackers calculate distance by multiplying your walking steps and walking stride length. Similarly, your running steps are multiplied by your running stride length. This will not necessarily match a pre-measured distance, nor will it show exactly what a GPS device will show.
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09-12-2014 01:16
09-12-2014 01:16
I am having the same trouble. I have disabled the option several times and the program continues to automatically add calories. Do you know of anything else to do?
09-12-2014 10:43
09-12-2014 10:43
@PattyLynn Hey there! Are you getting more calories when you're less active? Keep in mind that your calories will be calculated base on your BMR and the calories that you burned while doing activities. If you can provide me with some examples about what you're getting, I'll be happy to assist you
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09-12-2014 11:27
09-12-2014 11:27
Sam | USA
Fitbit One, Macintosh, IOS
Accepting solutions is your way of passing your solution onto others and improving everybody’s Fitbit experience.
09-12-2014 11:34
09-12-2014 11:34
Sam | USA
Fitbit One, Macintosh, IOS
Accepting solutions is your way of passing your solution onto others and improving everybody’s Fitbit experience.
12-21-2014 17:03
12-21-2014 17:03
I'm confused about the "enabled" vs. "disabled" - so you want the fitbit to count your BMR into your daily burn, PLUS you want it to count your activities/exercise calories, right? So I'm not sure what disabling the calorie estimation does. Remove the BMR burn? Force you to add the calorie burn from your activities manually, but keep the BMR burn? Sorry - I'm very literal in my thinking and I need things to be specific.
Thank you --
Donna
12-21-2014 18:40 - edited 12-21-2014 23:00
12-21-2014 18:40 - edited 12-21-2014 23:00
CoderDonna,
I haven't been able to find a comprehensive explanation of the calorie estimation feature, but have gleened bits and pieces here and there.
So here is my interpretation:
The calorie estimation feature is mainly for when you forget to (or choose not to) wear your fitbit on any particular day. It will kick in with an estimate of how many calories it thinks you would have burned if you actually had been using it. The longer you've used fitbit, the larger the database it has on you, and the more "accurate" the estimation (or so they claim). My guess is that it just spits out an average number, whoop de doo!
Supposedly, if you have the feature enabled and you are wearing your fitbit, you will get your real data, and not an estimate.
However, even the fitbit people will admit that if you have it enabled, and you are having a lightly active day, the estimation may kick in and give you an erroneously high reading. In other words, if you're not moving, fitbit thinks you left it at home and simply adds more calories.
Calorie estimation has nothing to do with BMR calories vs active calories. You will still get both in either setting.
Personally, I have my calorie estimation turned off. So far, I haven't forgotten to wear my fitbit. And If I did, I wouldn't want to rely on a "guestimate".
If you're a casual user, then you might like this feature. But I'm an addict -- I prefer hard numbers, lol.
12-22-2014 21:23
12-22-2014 21:23
Hi I am having an issue with my FB, for the past couple of days I manually enter my workout, and calories burned using my HRM, however the calories are not adding up to the total number of burned calories, i noticed because I added them, then I deleted my workout and the number of calories stayed the same, is anyone out there having the same issue? is this a bug??
thank u
12-23-2014 08:55
12-23-2014 08:55
@capi Hey there! Well, if you're using your Fitbit while doing the workout your Fitbit tracker will keep track of this activity. So, you should be only logging activities that aren't step based in order to improve the accuracy of this activity's contribution to your caloric burn.
When you're logging the activity and it's not giving you calories or anything it's because your tracker has the same data so there's nothing extra that you're going to receive. When you manually log an activity what you're doing is overriding the information that your tracker had.
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12-24-2014 11:34
12-24-2014 11:34
CoderDonna, disabling calorie estimation just means the Fitbit will not add estimated activity burn on days when it picks up no activity. Enabled, if you leave your fitbit at home it estimates a calorie burn that includes activity. It is apparently based on your average activity, but a lot of people find it overly generous. People have had higher calorie burns on days when they are sick in bed binge watching Netflix than a light activity day. I have had it disabled for years. If I don't wear my Fitbit, my calorie burn is just my BMR. When I do, I likely don't notice much difference compared to people with it enabled unless it is an unusually inactive day.
Sam | USA
Fitbit One, Macintosh, IOS
Accepting solutions is your way of passing your solution onto others and improving everybody’s Fitbit experience.
12-24-2014 11:40
12-24-2014 11:40
Capi, it may be that there was actually very little difference between what Fitbit would have credited and what you logged. I have had workouts where my Fitbit One and Polar HRM gave matching estimates (sometimes) and commonly within 20 calories of each other. The workouts I have seen this with include TurboJam/TurboKick, jumping rope, brisk walking on flat ground, Jillean Micheal's Baish Fat Boost Metabolism, intervals of walking and jogging. Where fitbit falls short for me are when hills or added resistance are added. I admit I haven't been logging workouts in recent weeks. The test would be to log something with a ridiculous calorie burn (like 1 calorie for an hour workout or something that would be much higher than your fitbit could possibly estimate for your stats). See it logging changes your total, then see what deleting the logged activity does to your total.
Sam | USA
Fitbit One, Macintosh, IOS
Accepting solutions is your way of passing your solution onto others and improving everybody’s Fitbit experience.
01-30-2015
12:09
- last edited on
01-31-2015
13:11
by
SilviaFitbit
01-30-2015
12:09
- last edited on
01-31-2015
13:11
by
SilviaFitbit
Hi anyone here ..can you explain what floors mean.. I just do not know.. TY in advance!! ~~~~ Ginny
Moderator: Format edited
01-31-2015 13:20
01-31-2015 13:20
@Ginny57 I'll be happy to explain this to you. Your tracker detects floors using an altimeter, which is a sensor that calculates altitude change based on atmospheric pressure. Atmospheric pressure decreases with increasing elevation, so the tracker calculates elevation gain based on the reduction in atmospheric pressure. Your tracker registers a floor when it detects continuous motion combined with an elevation gain of about 10 feet.
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