I have.
seems about right.
depends on level of effort, how many reps, and which lift.
I have.
seems about right.
depends on level of effort, how many reps, and which lift.
Ok, cool. Thanks for responding. That's what it is when I am doing my work sets (3x5) for squat and deadlift.
Your age also affects this. I'm 67 and of course it tends to affect old guys like me more. Below is the chart from the FitBit Charge 2 I wear. The big peak after beginning are the 3 sets of 5 reps of the 355 lb. hip belt squats that led off that session.
Weights.jpg
I take Crestor for cholesterol, Diovan HCT and Terazosin for high blood pressure.
This is really helpful. Thank you!
Glad to have been of some help. I post these charts in my log in the General Training Logs.
I wear both a Fitbit Versa and a Polar Chest strap monitor. The two are withing a beat or 2 for average, but off by 10 to 20 for peak. The Versa also lags the chest strap by a noticeable amount. The chest strap is best if you are concerned about loss of pump efficiency at high rates, want to manage intervals by heart rate, or want to monitor recovery rate.
I have kept track of my average, peak, and total cardio time since I was prescribed a beta blocker for blood pressure several years ago (before weight and StartingStrength). The beta blocker made it impossible to use the normal numbers to get into aerobic cardio range. I had to adjust my targets downward by 10 or so beats. You may need to do the same. Its not complicated to do if you have good records, or talk to your doctor about the correction.
I no longer take the beta blocker, or most of my other geezer meds, since I started picking up heavy things. You may end up doing the same, depending on why you are taking meds.
When training my average heart rate runs 115 to 125. My peak heart rate for fitbit is 155 and 171 for chest strap.
I wear a Garmin Fenix3 HR with chest strap. Depending on your age, 155 is probably fine. Max HR is somewhat age dependent. What is usually of more concern than max is recovery time.