01-26-2016
02:27
- last edited on
09-06-2020
20:15
by
MatthewFitbit
01-26-2016
02:27
- last edited on
09-06-2020
20:15
by
MatthewFitbit
01-26-2016 02:35
01-26-2016 02:35
I do the exact same walk twice a day. I have measured on my car odometer and it is exactly 3 miles. It takes me 39 minutes (plus or minus 30 seconds) every time. My heartrate according to my Charge HR varies as much as 50 beats per minute between walks, the distance reported varies by up to .75 miles, and the steps counted vary by up to 1,000 steps. The calorie burn varies by up to 50 calories, and usually shows lower when my heartrate reports higher. I am now questioning the validity of all of the numbers reported by my FitBit. Thinking of changing to Garmin.
01-26-2016 03:05
01-26-2016 03:05
01-26-2016 04:44 - edited 01-26-2016 05:07
01-26-2016 04:44 - edited 01-26-2016 05:07
I notice that neither of you mention taking your phone along and using MobileRun to track the actual GPS distance. That means that FitBit is calculating your distance based on your step count multiplied by your average stride length, either the default based on your height and sex, or the one you manually entered.
In reality, your stride length varies by quite a bit, depending on how fast you're stepping and how much you're stretching out. I use MobileRun and keep a spreadsheet that calculates my stride for each walk that I log. I've found my average stride over 109 logged walks is 30.3 inches, but it has varied from 26.8 to 40.9 inches on individual walks, depending on how I was moving. There's a fair correlation between pace and stride length, but even that's not precise. Generally, the faster my pace, the longer my stride and the more steps per minute.
Also remember that your calorie burn during exercise includes your BMR calories, so you'll find that you actually burn more calories for a given distance if you take longer to cover that distance. I average 179.3 calories per mile and 8.9 calories per minute, but those two figures appear in an inverse relationship, with my highest calorie burns per minute on those walks with the lowest calorie burns per mile... because it takes me less time to cover a mile, so the overall calorie burn is lower.
This chart, showing cals burned per mile against speed, illustrates that inverse relationship pretty clearly. The red line is speed, the blue line is calorie burn per mile. The lower the speed, the higher the calorie burn per mile. The spikes with the biggest differences are walks with my dog, when I'm really poking along letting him sniff everything.
Hope this helps!
Charge HR, Flex | Windows 10 | Android | iPad
Take a look at the Fitbit help site for further assistance and information.
01-27-2016 05:53
01-27-2016 05:53
01-27-2016 12:17
01-27-2016 12:17
MobileRun is the name for the "Track Your Exercise" portion of the Fitbit mobile app. Scroll down to "Track Your Exercise" and tap. Click the stopwatch icon in the upper-right corner, wait for the GPS circle to show GPS is active, then push the start button. Optionally, before pressing start, choose in the lower section whether you want to track a walk, run or hike, if you want to use voice cues, and how often those voice cues should occur.
You'll get a screen with a timer, pace and distance indicators, and a "pause" button. Press the "pause" button when you're finished with your walk and you'll also see a stop button displayed. Press AND HOLD the stop button until the exercise indicates it has ended.
Hope this helps!
Charge HR, Flex | Windows 10 | Android | iPad
Take a look at the Fitbit help site for further assistance and information.
02-01-2016 14:19
02-01-2016 14:19
02-01-2016 15:04
02-01-2016 15:04
02-04-2016 02:57
02-04-2016 02:57
Have you tried the trip around the track with MobileRun?
Charge HR, Flex | Windows 10 | Android | iPad
Take a look at the Fitbit help site for further assistance and information.
04-28-2020 12:03
04-28-2020 12:03
Exactly my problem. 3.5 mile jog distance, Google maps, car say. 34 mins 10 minute a mile.
Yet my fitbit says 2.7miles.
And I'm not burning 3000 to 4000 calories a day, utter rubbish. I could eat 3 12 pizzas a day and lose weight if that was true. My height and weight calculator says I burn 2,300 calories a day, hence I need to eat 1,800 calories a day to lose weight at end of week.
04-30-2020 20:30
04-30-2020 20:30
Wow!!! Awesome reply. ❤️ Your explanation was extremely helpful. Thank you!!!