I'm glad you've asked, but four days on there's no reply; I've often wondered the same thing - I do a ten miler across Dunstable Downs, incorporating an ascent & descent of over four hundred feet, yet I've done similar distances with very few gradients and the calorie count is similar.
So how about it technical people?
How could this possibly work? Maintaining speed while climbing burns more calories, clearly, but how would MMR know what speed is relative to grade? Maybe working off of a GPS device, but using average speed against calculated grade would be misleading (although it might come out in the wash in the end).
How about linking in real time weather data and accounting for wind speed and direction when calculating calories spent?
I have a similar question relating to altitude but with reference to distance travelled. If going up or down a hill to get from A to B as opposed to going on a level straight from A to B, you are going to cover additional distance via the hill.
Does Mapmyrun take elevation into account in its United Kingdom maps? My GPS and speed\distance footpod suggests I cover about an additional 0.5k than what is stated on Mapmyrun
Thanks
Scott J
I would like to add my 2 cents, if I may.
First, as reported in the NYT (12/20/2007, "Putting Very Little Weight in Calorie Counting Methods"), heart rate does not always translate into calories burned. "Two individuals of the same age, gender, height, weight and even the same level of fitness can burn a different amount of calories at the same level of exertion....Part of that is genetic and part is familiarity with the exercise. The more familiar you are with an exercise, the fewer calories you use at the same level of effort."
Also, a kcal is defined as the amount of energy needed to raise the temp of 1 gram of water 1 degree c. It can also be represented as the amount of energy needed to move a given amount of weight a given distance. So it doesn't matter if you run 5:00/mile or 10:00/mile, you will burn the same calories after one mile.
As far as running uphill, you burn calories more quickly than running on level terrain.
You guys are turning into geeks ;o)
Use calories as a rough guide, not some kind of "ultimate truth"
Of course, if you are a beginner, you will burn more calorires on the same run, same time, same speed, running with an experienced runner - who will run more efficiently.
jkhl95 , The human body runs much less efficiently at higher speed, so I can't see your statement about "5:00/mile or 10:00/mile" is right. Are you trying to tell me that you don't feel a lot more tired after the 5 min miler? and, that it is the same effort? (I doubt it ;o)
Bendy, you state that "The human body runs much less efficiently at higher speed, so I can't see your statement about '5:00/mile or 10:00/mile' is right. Are you trying to tell me that you don't feel a lot more tired after the 5 min miler? and, that it is the same effort? (I doubt it ;o)"
Feeling more tired and burning more calories is not the same thing. It doesn't seem right, but it's true that speed does not influence how many calories we burn (well, not entirely, as running does burn more than walking)--with any real significance anyway. Studies have shown that it takes about the same amount of oxygen (and, likewise, about the same number of calories) to run a mile regardless of whether you are running quickly or slowly (Daniels, Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 17: 332-8, 1985). Running a 5-mile loop faster than usual won't help you unload more calories than usual (Ballor et al., Amercan Journal of Clinical Nutrition 51: 142-6, 1990). If you want to burn more calories, you run farther. 5 miles @ 9:00/mile will burn more calories than 3 miles @ 6:00/mile. I still find it hard to believe sometimes, but that's the science of it.
Buy a Garmin Edge or similar. They have a built-in atmospheric pressure sensor as well as GPS to get a fairly accurate idea of your elevation. This allows it to track when you're going uphill and/or downhil and estimate the calorie burn accordingly.
It's still not going to be that accurate, but much better than methods that can't use elevation/grade/speed data. Besides, you can upload all that data into other programs such as SportTracks, that might do a better job of estimating. The forum members there spend a LOT of time discussing and tweaking the algorythms to make it much more accurate. Some even use power metres on their wheels to gain further accuracy.
The whole calories thing used to be of great importance to me but hardly at all these days.
However, ironically enough I was wondering about something this morining that this thread is about... yesterday lunchtime I did a very leisurely 6.5 Km bike ride in about 45 minutes, and allegedly burned about 600 calaries.
Then yesterday evening I did a reasonably energetic 16 km (different routes entirely) in the same time... for 500 calories.
I can;t for the life see how I could have done almost three times the distancve in the same time and burned less calories!
didds
None of the calories counters works accurately. You will get different results using MotionBased, Mapmyride, Sporttracks, Garmin TrainingCenter etc.
There is probably a guideline out there somewhere. For the bicycle I have always heard 40 calories per mile. This doesn't take into account the exponential increase in effort required the faster you go, but apparently it is close enough at the speeds we typically ride: 16 - 22 miles per hour. That is what I use, so my afternoon 18 mile rides show up at 1026 calories on the GPS and calculates out to 720 calories. I trust the more pessimistic 720 more when figuring out either anticipate weight loss or how much extra ice cream I can eat. :-)
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