I erged 11000 in 60 min with a damper setting of 3 and the monitor shows the calories burned were 575. Then I erged 11000 in 60 min with a damper setting of 6 and the monitor shows the calories burned were 575.

Yep, that's how the curve fitting maths in the PM2/PM3/PM4 monitors work. They calculate (k)calories based on you being 80Kg and using 300 (k)cals just to go up and down the rail doing no work.vsaksena wrote: I erged 11000 in 60 min with a damper setting of 3 and the monitor shows the calories burned were 575. Then I erged 11000 in 60 min with a damper setting of 6 and the monitor shows the calories burned were 575.
The damper setting has nothing to do with the amount of work you do. The pace or watts are what matter.vsaksena wrote:I want to understand the following scenario:
I erged 11000 in 60 min with a damper setting of 3 and the monitor shows the calories burned were 575. Then I erged 11000 in 60 min with a damper setting of 6 and the monitor shows the calories burned were 575.I believe I put in lot more efforts when the damper setting was at 6. Is there any explanation to this scenario?
Just a slightly pedantic clarification: The higher the watts the faster the rate of energy you use. Multiply watts (a measure of power) by time and you get watt-hours (a measure of energy). Converting from watt-hours to ergs or to calories is a simple matter of scaling.hjs wrote:The lower the pace xxx/500m or the higher the watts the more energy you use.
Normally, that is true, but it doesn't work for the calories values shown on the indoor rower monitors, since C2 has some extra calories added in to account for energy expended that has not gone into spinning the fly wheel (basal metabolism plus acceleration and deceleration of your own mass on the slide). I suppose that this is useful for those who are working on weight problems.djh wrote:Converting from watt-hours to ergs or to calories is a simple matter of scaling.
But, on damper 2 more air is going through the fan so the damping is higher and the flywheel slows more quickly. The PM2/3/4 all measure that deceleration and will compensate for the higher rate of deceleration by giving you a different pace.icomefrombirmingham wrote:So...I think we would all agree that if we erged two 10ks at a pace of 2:00/500m and a rate of 24SPM; one of them (row 1) on a damper setting of 0 and the other (row 2) on a damper setting of 10 we'd all feel more tired after row 2?
I can't do that. I row everything on drag 120-125 as that suits me and my technique doesn't improve if I push the drag higher. But I'm not a typical rower at 5'7" and 165lbs.icomefrombirmingham wrote:In your first paragraph, are you saying that one can't row those two 10ks at "0" and "10" damper settings at the same stroke rate and pace? Or that one can, but each will FEEL very different?