morningstar
Cathlete
Hey guys,
As some of you know, I am fairly new to cardio for the most part. As such, I decided to hook up my HRM for my non-strength workouts for the next while to see what I could see. So this morning I did Jillian Michael's No More Trouble Zones and then did my own Cardio Coach premix for a walk/run to work.
Now, in 56 minutes, the NMTZ only burned 281 calories, my HR max was 73% and my average HR was 60%. The shorter 36 minute CC premix burned 357 calories, my max HR was 96% and my average HR was 84%.
The thing that gets me is that apparently I burned 60% fat doing the low intensity NMTZ (and it really is low intensity - as a matter of fact, I am going to use it as an abs workout from now on), and I burned 30% fat for the CC premix. I assume that I am burning carbohydrates the rest of the time, am I right?
Here's my question: why is high intensity interval training considered to be so good for fat burning, if I'm burning a higher percentage of fat at a lower intensity? Is EPOC longer or greater with HIIT than with low intensity?
Any light that people can shed on this would be great. I know a lot about weight lifting, but I'm still in the learning stages for effective cardio training.
As some of you know, I am fairly new to cardio for the most part. As such, I decided to hook up my HRM for my non-strength workouts for the next while to see what I could see. So this morning I did Jillian Michael's No More Trouble Zones and then did my own Cardio Coach premix for a walk/run to work.
Now, in 56 minutes, the NMTZ only burned 281 calories, my HR max was 73% and my average HR was 60%. The shorter 36 minute CC premix burned 357 calories, my max HR was 96% and my average HR was 84%.
The thing that gets me is that apparently I burned 60% fat doing the low intensity NMTZ (and it really is low intensity - as a matter of fact, I am going to use it as an abs workout from now on), and I burned 30% fat for the CC premix. I assume that I am burning carbohydrates the rest of the time, am I right?
Here's my question: why is high intensity interval training considered to be so good for fat burning, if I'm burning a higher percentage of fat at a lower intensity? Is EPOC longer or greater with HIIT than with low intensity?
Any light that people can shed on this would be great. I know a lot about weight lifting, but I'm still in the learning stages for effective cardio training.