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thats very interesting. i would assume that because the incline is changing you are essentially working harder to maintain that heart rate and therefore burining more calories
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Emma
Sprinkles NEEDS to play with this pup...he has style To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 10 or greater. You currently have 0 posts. |
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fat burning is a lower heart rate than cardio. I am continually trying to slow down because I get my heart rate up too high to do aerobic work.
Plus, who knows how either of these companies are estimating the calories burned. I am willing to bet one guesses high to please people. |
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But to answer your question, programs on cardio machines take infomation that is collected from RER, RQ, Vo2 max studies and use an equation that will help determine where you should be if you are at a certain point in HR, age, weight. Its close but it's not dead on. There are three sources of energy your body uses ATP CP lactic acid (anaerobic) aerobic each gets it's energy source from a different system and takes a different amount of time for them to kick in. It's also important to know that fat burns in the flame of a carb meaning if you don't have enough carbs your body will not use fat effic. If you have a prolonged cardio session at a low intensity your body will tend to use more fat as an energy source since fat (lipids) yield the most amount of energy per gram (9). |
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exactly, walking on incline burns around the same amount of calories..which is quite suprising because me personally, i exert more energy while running for 10 minutes rather than walking on an incline for 10 minutes...the incline walk also works your calves realllly good.
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Think about it, a calorie is a measure of energy used. moving a 195# body up an incline takes more energy than moving it horizontaly. However, it takes more of my potential chemical energy to run fast than it does to run slow. a nice jog is very energy efficient, and I am able to run 26 miles in four hours vs walking up a mountain in 4 hours, but only travelling 5 miles.
I used to work on the 9th floor of a hospital, the first six flights of steps were easy, it was the last 3 that were killer. When training for the marathon, I had to run long distances. now for the 5K I run shorter faster runs. If I were looking to burn fat, I'd be doing circuit workouts. I have a feeling that once you become more fit, you will not get your heart rate up high enough by walking the incline. |
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