calorie readouts on bike computers

calorie readouts on bike computers

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Discussion

Rob_T

Original Poster:

1,916 posts

252 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
does anyone know how accurate the calories burnt readouts are on these bike computers. i was intruiged to notice on a post about riding to kimmeridge and back that the rider burned nearly 400 calories. seems quite a lot and have never really thought about how much you burn. any idea on what the tolerances are ie +/- 10%? clearly it can't take wind into consideration, nor hills i imagine, so it must just work on speed, but then there must also be a factor for size of tyres. obviously skinny road tyres are much easier than mtb tyres. anyone know the degree of accuracy?

PlaneFan

180 posts

166 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
And the wheels still turn and distance is covered when the rider is coasting or on a downslope and not requiring so much energy....but the calories still get counted on the computer....so I'm guessing not that accurate....or am I completely wrong?


Accelebrate

5,252 posts

216 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
I use an app on my phone to track my rides, which provides a calorie readout. I have two phones, an iPhone and an Android phone, if I track the same ride on both phones the iPhones calorie count is significantly higher. hehe

Comfortably Dumb

1,237 posts

186 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
Amnesia's Garmin in the other thread has gps for elevation and a heart rate monitor so should be a little more accurate.

BoRED S2upid

19,714 posts

241 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
It can't be very accurate as it doesn't take into account loads of things.

Also and please ignore my understanding of biology here but wouldn't someone very fit hardly breaking into a sweat on a 3 mile run burn less calories than a fat person struggling to complete the jog? their body would be working a LOT harder as they are unfit and sweating like a pig huffing and puffing whereas the fit person is just warming up, computer still ticking along at the same rate. Some fnacy ones do ask for your age and weight I presume for this reason.

How a phone does this accurately I have no idea, distance and time as thats the only info it has?

Pints

18,444 posts

195 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all

Sshh!

Don't tell Mrs Pints. She's quite happy thinking she's burning X calories every day.

Although to be fair to her, she's probably burning more than the computer's telling her. She has to drag around the kiddie trailer, loaded with HalfPints mk1 and 2. hehe

Fume troll

4,389 posts

213 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
Depends on the type of computer really but they're generally not terrible accurate. Mine has GPS and HRM, and it still overestimates by about 10-20%. Useful for a general indication though.

Cheers,

FT.

Comfortably Dumb

1,237 posts

186 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
Accelebrate said:
I use an app on my phone to track my rides, which provides a calorie readout. I have two phones, an iPhone and an Android phone, if I track the same ride on both phones the iPhones calorie count is significantly higher. hehe
Mine tells me how many burgers I've burned. What I want to know is how it knows if I've had bacon, cheese mayo etc on said burger!

Raoul Duke

929 posts

164 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
If its got a HRM and cadence monitor attached then its likely to be reasonably accurate, particularly if when setting it up you input your age / height / weight / resting pulse and any other relevant variables.
My Garmin asked for all of the above together with an idea of how much exercise i do, that said i would still suspect that it misreads by 5-10% but even so its good enough to be a useful training tool.
If i run the Garmin without the HRM then the readouts are vastly different, i.e. higher as it clearly assumes an average / default level of fitness ( thats not to say i am overly fit but i do a lot of riding so it takes less effort over a set distance than someone who is new to it ). Therefore i suspect that anything giving a readout based purely on speed / distance without taking any other factors into consideration is unlikely to be very accurate unless your body type is bang on the default settings.
Interestingly i have a Polar HRM as well for when i go running. This also asked for resting heart rate / age / weight when i was setting it up and the calorie readouts are pretty much what i would expect when compared with the bike so i am fairly confidant that i can trust the readouts.

Raoul Duke

929 posts

164 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
Comfortably Dumb said:
Mine tells me how many burgers I've burned. What I want to know is how it knows if I've had bacon, cheese mayo etc on said burger!
Ah the burger count...does anyone know how many calories are likely in a large Dominos pizza with a side order as thats my weekend poison? Suspect that its at least 2500-3000, if so its about an 80 mile ride at a reasonably quick tempo just to repay the damage - sometimes it pays not to think about it!

dubbs

1,588 posts

285 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
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For them to be accurate they need to be a pretty high end one. If you can enter your sex, age weight, height, body fat percentage, VO2MAX, etc., (that level of detail) then using GPS, your heart rate and the other factors you enter they can be pretty accurate. More so if the also utilise the cadence and speed sensors.

Most basic info it needs to be even slightly accurate is heart rate, age, weight, speed, duration - anything less and it's so guesswork it's not worth worrying about.

shouldbworking

4,769 posts

213 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
Mine is decidedly optimistic, endomondo with a hrm gives a reasonable guess. That said if my primary goal was burning calories I wouldn't be on a bike, it's far too efficient.

Token comment to say I understand that some people have joint problems etc that prevent them from running, or that they just enjoy cycling more or whatever reason for using a bike for weight loss.

oyster

12,609 posts

249 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
shouldbworking said:
Mine is decidedly optimistic, endomondo with a hrm gives a reasonable guess. That said if my primary goal was burning calories I wouldn't be on a bike, it's far too efficient.
Cycling is one of the best ways to burn calories simply because it's quite easy to maintain a fairly steady intensity over a long period of time.

dubbs

1,588 posts

285 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
More important than burning calories is burning FAT - the two aren't the same.

Cycling is fantastic for burning fat and one of the most efficient ways of doing so

DBSV8

5,958 posts

239 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
dubbs said:
More important than burning calories is burning FAT - the two aren't the same.

Cycling is fantastic for burning fat and one of the most efficient ways of doing so
can agree with this

ive lost 11kg cycling since feb ,

IroningMan

10,154 posts

247 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
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500 - 600 calories an hour is a reasonable figure for a steady ride.

3,500 for a pound of body fat...

IroningMan

10,154 posts

247 months

Tuesday 14th June 2011
quotequote all
swerni said:
I'm 43, 6'5" and just over 15 stone.
Thanks for sharing.

Sticky the Stick Insect.

Gnostic Ascent

284 posts

240 months

Wednesday 15th June 2011
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I work on approx 1000 calories for an hour at 16-19mph for an 85Kg person.

oyster

12,609 posts

249 months

Wednesday 15th June 2011
quotequote all
Gnostic Ascent said:
I work on approx 1000 calories for an hour at 16-19mph for an 85Kg person.
On a road bike at 16mph I doubt you'll burn as many as 1000 in an hour. At 18mph you might, or at 16mph on a MTB/Hybrid.

Best thing to do is be a bit pessimistic rather than optimistic.

andySC

1,193 posts

159 months

Wednesday 15th June 2011
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My Garmin reckons I've used 395782 cals since Feb last year. How accurate that is...no idea.