How Can Using A Heart Rate Monitor And Training Zones Help Me Lose Weight Or Improve My Performance? April 15, 2007
Posted by Lisa Sabin in Endurance Training, Fitness Goals, Heart Rate Training, Injury Prevention, Running With A Heart Rate Monitor, Weight Loss, healthy lifestyles.trackback
Knowing your Max HR, will help determine your individual training zones. I think we all want more effective workouts. Using training zones will help you reach your fitness goals faster.
Some facts about training zones:
- Training zones have names that correspond with their benefits.
- Training zones have a floor and a ceiling, a range.
- Training zones are sports specific.
- Training zones use different fuels, depending on current fitness level.
- Different amounts of calories are burned in each zone.
- Different ratios of carbohydrate and fat are burned in each zone.
- Training zones change if you are at altitude(Max HR drops).
- Training zones are affected by medication and drugs.
- Training zones are relative to individuals.
Zones
Zone #5 – Redline
- 90-100% Max HR
- Mostly Carbohydrates burned
- Approximately 20 Calories per min (150 lb person)(600 Calories for 30 min.)
- Maximum Effort: Sprinting, high speed intervals
- Benefit: Improved lactate tolerance (Great Improvements in Speed and Performance)
- Lactate Concentration: >8mmol/l
- VO2: 86-100%
- Rating of Perceived Exertion: 7-10
- Description of R.P.E.: Very, very hard to Maximal, Can’t talk except for short phrases
Zone #4 – Threshold
- 80-90% Max HR
- More Carbohydrate than fat burned
- Approximately 15 calories per min (150lb person)(450 for 30 min)
- Hard Effort: Time trials, intervals, tempo, hill work
- Benefit: Improved anaerobic capacity, lactate clearance (Improve Speed and Performance)
- Lactate Concentration: 4-8 mmol/l
- VO2: 73-86%
- Rating of Perceived Exertion: 5-7
- Description of R.P.E.: Hard to very, very hard, can still talk, but not comfortably
Zone #3 – Aerobic
- 70-80% Max HR
- Nearly equal amounts of carbohydrate and fat burned.
- Approximately 10 calories per min (150lb person) (300 calories per 30 min)
- Endurance and steady state
- Benefits: Improved aerobic capacity, optimal cardiovascular training (Improve Fitness)
- Lactate Concentration: 3-4 mmol/l
- VO2: 60-73%
- Rating of Perceived Exertion: 4-5
- Description of R.P.E.: Somewhat hard to hard, Very aware of breathing, still comfortable to talk
Zone #2 -Temperate
- 60-70% Max HR
- Mostly Fat Burned
- Approximately 7 calories per min (150lb person) (210 per 30 min)
- Long Slow Distance, recovery and regeneration
- Benefits: Improved fat mobilization, basic cardio training (Maintain Fitness)
- Lactate Concentration: 2-3 mmol/l
- VO2: 48-60%
- Rating of Perceived Exertion: 2.5-4
- Description of R.P.E.: Easy to somewhat hard, Comfortable talking, but aware of breathing
Zone # 1-Healthy Heart
- 50-60% Max HR
- More Fat Burned
- Approximately 4 calories per min (150lb person) (120 calories per 30 min)
- Warm up and cool down, rehabilitation
- Benefits: Improved self esteem, stress reduction, blood chemistry(Get Fit)
Example: My Max HR for running is 200
- Zone 5 – 180-200 (Racing!)
- Zone 4 – 160-180 (Racing or tempo runs)
- Zone 3 – 140-160 (Most of my time is spent here)
- Zone 2 – 120-140 (Recovery)
- Zone 1 – 100-120 (Warm up & cool down)
Example: My Max HR for cycling is 190
- Zone 5 – 171-190 (Racing, triathlon!)
- Zone 4 – 152-171 (Long difficult rides, hill climbing, spin class intervals)
- Zone 3 – 133-152 (Most time spent here)
- Zone 2 – 114-133 (Recovery rides)
- Zone 1 – 95-114 (Warm up and cool down)
Things to Consider:
Spending a lot of time in zone 3 helps develop a good cardiovascular base. Once a fitness base is established, improvements can be made by targeting 1 or 2 workouts per week in zones 4 and 5. Be careful not to have all your workouts in zone 4 or 5. The risk for injury and burnout are greater in these zones. Spending too much time in zones 2 will not yield the desired results for weight loss or performance even though a higher percentage of fat is burned. The total amount of calories burned is significantly lower than in zone 3.
A sound training program uses all 5 zones. Remember to warm up and cool down each work out. Build your base and add in some key work outs. Watch your fitness improve!
Sources:
Sally Edwards, Heart Zones Training
Sally Edwards & Sally Reed, Heart Zones Cycling
Edmund R. Burke, PHD, Precision Heart Rate Training
Lisa – thanks for this fantastic post. I’ve read all sorts of books, and talked to a lot of people about HR zones, and what they mean. While I’d got a sense of what it was about, this is the first time I feel that I’ve understood it. Thank you.
You are welcome. I was struggling trying to create a table on wordpress and that’s why it took so long!
This gives me more reason to get my Polar watch! Thanks a lot for this. I’ll print it and post it on my training journal
You are welcome!
great – i’ve been looking for correlation of HR zones to calories, do you know how the weight factors in for calories burned? I’m trying to put a formula into my spreadsheet.
Great post. I could not agree more . Using a heart rate monitor is one of the best ways to loose fat and gain fitness. I have been using a heart ratemonitor for training since 1998 and run many marathons and Ultramarathons. Now I do more hill running
How about a pulsemeter and personal trainer installed in your Mobile Phone? check out Heart rate monitor and fitness advisor
Any comment will be highly appreciated.