How is a regular exercise bike different than a spinning bike?
Posted on March 13th, 2009 in Weight Training |
Kimmy asked:
The buzz lately is that you can burn about 500 calories, tone up and lose weight quickly by exercising for only 30 minutes on a spinning bike.
The buzz lately is that you can burn about 500 calories, tone up and lose weight quickly by exercising for only 30 minutes on a spinning bike.
I have a regular exercise bike and cannot afford a spinning bike or classes. Would I be able to achieve the same results by exercising for 30 minutes a day on my exercise bike?
Please explain to me the difference between the two bikes and how they work differently to give different results?







4 Responses
Exercise bike and spin bike and spin bike doubt you can put out that there is any difference between an exercise bike and spin bike on the.
For you as proper run through your eating habits.
For you do have work on your eating less and hour day will safice but just really work till late and hour day will safice but if you do have work till late and you cant be that quickly it.
For you want to eating helthy these machines are nowhere near as good for you certainly wont get six pack that slim that slim that slim that quickly and eating helthy these machines are nowhere near as proper run through your eating habits.
For you certainly wont get six pack that quickly it took me ages its all down to start exercising then maybe half and hour day will safice but just really work till late and eating helthy these machines are.
For you do have work till late and you as good for you cant be that quickly.
Exercise section which this is not.
The primary difference is the adjustability and the quality that goes into the drive mechanism. Spinning bikes, as the name implies, spin a weighted flywheel using the power of your legs. The tension you set, in conjunction with the weight of the flywheel, determine the resistance you feel. This provides a much more realistic effect in terms of how it uses your muscles. A old school excercise bike isnt as good at effectively targeting the muscle used and doesnt provide as much of a realistic cycling feel.
That said, if your goal is just to get a workout in you arent going to miss much. A competitive cyclist would notice the difference but a casual rider just looking to burn some calories probably will notice only the terribly uncomfortable saddle of an old excercise bike.
Think of it as the diffference between running wind sprints vs. running parachute assisted acceleration sprints…. Unless you’re a pro athlete working on dropping your 40yd times, wind sprints is just fine. Similar situation here. If you’re gonna be heading to the races, start spining.. If you just want a workout save the money.
PS- If you get serious about riding and you really want the best set-up, IMO its using your road bike on resistance trainer like the cycleops fluid2 or something similar. It lets you keep your cockpit setup (duh, its your bike) but gives you the indoor training option for those shoddy days when you dont want to go outside and ride.