Originally posted by: EGGO
Straight from my fitness magazine on Cardio Know-How:
"The best cardio machine for fat-burning appears to be the good ol' treadmill"
I agree, since I dropped from 200 lbs to 138 lbs using just the treadmill back then in about 6 months.
"The best form of cardio for maintaining or enhancing leg mass and strength appears to be the stationary bike."
Also, do interval training, take supplements like caffeine, carnitine, and HCA to help burn more fat (I never took anything but these will help).
Originally posted by: Fritzo
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote>Originally posted by: EGGO
Straight from my fitness magazine on Cardio Know-How:
"The best cardio machine for fat-burning appears to be the good ol' treadmill"
I agree, since I dropped from 200 lbs to 138 lbs using just the treadmill back then in about 6 months.
"The best form of cardio for maintaining or enhancing leg mass and strength appears to be the stationary bike."
Also, do interval training, take supplements like caffeine, carnitine, and HCA to help burn more fat (I never took anything but these will help).</end quote></div>
I don't understand that, as the elliptical moves all 4 limbs, while a treadmill only moves two.
Originally posted by: EGGO
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote>Originally posted by: Fritzo
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote>Originally posted by: EGGO
Straight from my fitness magazine on Cardio Know-How:
"The best cardio machine for fat-burning appears to be the good ol' treadmill"
I agree, since I dropped from 200 lbs to 138 lbs using just the treadmill back then in about 6 months.
"The best form of cardio for maintaining or enhancing leg mass and strength appears to be the stationary bike."
Also, do interval training, take supplements like caffeine, carnitine, and HCA to help burn more fat (I never took anything but these will help).</end quote></div>
I don't understand that, as the elliptical moves all 4 limbs, while a treadmill only moves two. </end quote></div>
It's a study from the University of Birmingham in England. They did a study with treadmill, stationary bike, stepmill, cross-trainer, and elliptical. The treadmill burned almost 30% more fat than the others. Elliptical is still a good machine to go on, since it requires coordination and all.
Originally posted by: Rubycon
Neither will allow you to take off.
Which is better to burn off calories/loose weight.
Originally posted by: Capt Caveman
Interesting. I try to run outdoors year round but I was thinking of a stair climber over a treadmill thinking it would provide a more intense workout.
Originally posted by: KoolDrew
As for the cardio itself, do whatever you are comfortable with. It's more important that you are actually doing it, than getting all nit picky about which is best. If running on the treadmill hurts your joints, don't do it. I highly recommend switching cardio up though. Don't just do steady state cardio constantly. Throw some intervals in there, some hill repeats, etc.
Also, to clarify on my post above, losing weight is mostly about diet. The amount of calories you lose doing cardio is pretty slim and even if you eat a tiny bit over your maintenance calories you're still going to steadily gain weight, regardless of how much cardio you're doing. Also, if you don't already do some form of resistance training, you should.
Originally posted by: vi_edit
Originally posted by: KoolDrew
As for the cardio itself, do whatever you are comfortable with. It's more important that you are actually doing it, than getting all nit picky about which is best. If running on the treadmill hurts your joints, don't do it. I highly recommend switching cardio up though. Don't just do steady state cardio constantly. Throw some intervals in there, some hill repeats, etc.
Also, to clarify on my post above, losing weight is mostly about diet. The amount of calories you lose doing cardio is pretty slim and even if you eat a tiny bit over your maintenance calories you're still going to steadily gain weight, regardless of how much cardio you're doing. Also, if you don't already do some form of resistance training, you should.
Great post.
The "better" machine is the one that you'll use longer, and more frequently. For me it's an elliptical because of the low impact. And the Precor that the OP mentioned at Costco is certainly one of the best ones out there for the money. They pioneered the elliptical market and still are the best brand out there IMHO.
And your point about food is great one too - 30 minutes on a treadmill or elliptical can be erased with a Snickers bar or cup of ice cream.
Originally posted by: jman19
Originally posted by: vi_edit
Originally posted by: KoolDrew
As for the cardio itself, do whatever you are comfortable with. It's more important that you are actually doing it, than getting all nit picky about which is best. If running on the treadmill hurts your joints, don't do it. I highly recommend switching cardio up though. Don't just do steady state cardio constantly. Throw some intervals in there, some hill repeats, etc.
Also, to clarify on my post above, losing weight is mostly about diet. The amount of calories you lose doing cardio is pretty slim and even if you eat a tiny bit over your maintenance calories you're still going to steadily gain weight, regardless of how much cardio you're doing. Also, if you don't already do some form of resistance training, you should.
Great post.
The "better" machine is the one that you'll use longer, and more frequently. For me it's an elliptical because of the low impact. And the Precor that the OP mentioned at Costco is certainly one of the best ones out there for the money. They pioneered the elliptical market and still are the best brand out there IMHO.
And your point about food is great one too - 30 minutes on a treadmill or elliptical can be erased with a Snickers bar or cup of ice cream.
You're still better off doing cardio and eating that Snickers than doing nothing.