Calories burned
#26
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 14,277
Likes: 3
I'm not anal enough to want exact numbers.
Calorie counting is a rough estimate for me. Likewise for burned calories.
This method has worked well.
I use 20 Calories a mile for easy efforts, 30 moderate, and 40 for superhuman going to die type efforts.
I'm sure it is all BS but my weight is stable or drops depending on my goal.
I also do not bother tracking during days that have huge amounts of exercise and the day after. Ex a 120 mile ride with 13,000 feet of climbing.
The only reason I track is to keep me from eating everything in sight due to my insatiable appetite.
Calorie counting is a rough estimate for me. Likewise for burned calories.
This method has worked well.
I use 20 Calories a mile for easy efforts, 30 moderate, and 40 for superhuman going to die type efforts.
I'm sure it is all BS but my weight is stable or drops depending on my goal.
I also do not bother tracking during days that have huge amounts of exercise and the day after. Ex a 120 mile ride with 13,000 feet of climbing.
The only reason I track is to keep me from eating everything in sight due to my insatiable appetite.
#27
I live in Cleveland also...which big hill are you going down that is broken up with lights or sharp curves. Also, what hill do you find the most fun to bomb down, I'm looking for raw speed here.
#28
Full Member

Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 444
Likes: 32
From: Cleveland
Bikes: Bob Jackson, Trek & Sampson
Can't think of too many in Cleveland that are a problem for bikes. However we did an Inline race near Vally City with hills and at the bottom of every hill was a nasty turn.
#30
Since I got my power meter, it is interesting to see how much energy (Kjoules) I produce on a ride. I always knew that most of the HR / speed devices were inaccurate and overstated the calories but what was slightly surprising was the amount. Generally, on a hard 3 hour ride I will burn approximately 500 calories an hour.
My point here is that a lot of people misinterpret the data they get from power meters. You burned 500 calories per hour generating the wattage measured by the power meter. But your body has an additional base metabolism that also has to be accounted for just to keep you alive. In other words your body is burning calories doing a lot of things that your power meter does not measure. So the power you produce won't equal the calories you burn; it is only one component.
Back to the thought experiment, you'd probably have "burned" 2400 calories just sitting there all day (YMMV). Translated to your own experience that would be an additional 100 calories per hour on top of the 500 you measured which is much more in line with many of the estimates you see from various sources.
#31
Banned
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 28,387
Likes: 3
From: Santa Barbara, CA
Bikes: Specialized Tarmac SL2, Specialized Tarmac SL, Giant TCR Composite, Specialized StumpJumper Expert HT
Here is a simple thought experiment. According to calculations derived from your power meter you say you are "burning" 500 calories per hour. Sit on your bike in the garage all day without turning the cranks. How many calories does the meter say you've burned? Zero. Does that sound right?
My point here is that a lot of people misinterpret the data they get from power meters. You burned 500 calories per hour generating the wattage measured by the power meter. But your body has an additional base metabolism that also has to be accounted for just to keep you alive. In other words your body is burning calories doing a lot of things that your power meter does not measure. So the power you produce won't equal the calories you burn; it is only one component.
Back to the thought experiment, you'd probably have "burned" 2400 calories just sitting there all day (YMMV). Translated to your own experience that would be an additional 100 calories per hour on top of the 500 you measured which is much more in line with many of the estimates you see from various sources.
My point here is that a lot of people misinterpret the data they get from power meters. You burned 500 calories per hour generating the wattage measured by the power meter. But your body has an additional base metabolism that also has to be accounted for just to keep you alive. In other words your body is burning calories doing a lot of things that your power meter does not measure. So the power you produce won't equal the calories you burn; it is only one component.
Back to the thought experiment, you'd probably have "burned" 2400 calories just sitting there all day (YMMV). Translated to your own experience that would be an additional 100 calories per hour on top of the 500 you measured which is much more in line with many of the estimates you see from various sources.
#32
Senior Member
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 495
Likes: 1
From: Kent, WA
Bikes: 2005 S-Works SR Equipped,1978 Tom Ritchie Road bike, Kuwahara Tandem
So with all the over calculation of the calories used, why would a company like Garmin [and others] come up with some over inflated number. You would think that with all the money they have with R&D that they could come up with a better number. Does anyone know how they come up with those numbers/calculations? I know as a Mercedes technician that the Magic 8 Ball has worked wonders for me. The amount of customers that come in with intermittent issues that get resolved with this thing is amazing. Maybe they have an industrial strength version.
#33
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 213
Likes: 0
Bikes: 2009 SE Draft SS, 2001 Trek 1000 Alpha roadie, 1991 Diamondback mtb & 1976 KHS Gran Sport mixte
That's what my Bell F20 (yes I know it's no power meter) says when I ride at medium to high intensity for an hour...I usually do 15 miles in that hour and get about 450 calories burned...at about 17-20mph.
#35
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 213
Likes: 0
Bikes: 2009 SE Draft SS, 2001 Trek 1000 Alpha roadie, 1991 Diamondback mtb & 1976 KHS Gran Sport mixte
Ops, forgot what my computer read after that particular "ride". I did that on my trainer. But on a ride from my house to Venice beach's bikepath..headed north to the end of the paths near Malibu..then rode back home. His iPhone app said we burned 1400 calories in 2 1/2 hours of pretty high intense riding...
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