Is Swimming a good cardio for fat loss, I do Hit cardio 4 days a week but wanted to do something different on the other day's and thought swimming would be a good change. Should I swim or do some other form of cardio.
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Machher said:Swimming is great for Fat loss and muscle building.
The comparison can not to be made. These types of athletes are of 2 completely different builds. Most olympic swimmers are visibly muscular where as olympic sprinters are generally very skinny. Also running requires mainly only legs during the workout where as swimming is a full body workout no matter what speed stroke; especially butterfly.LAM said:swimming is great for fat loss to a point...there have been many studies done on the body fat percentages of elite sprinters vs swimmers. on average the sprinters where had 3-4% less body fat than the swimmers.
the effects of cold water immersion have a negative effect thermoregulation and lipolysis...
Is Swimming a good cardio for fat loss
What would thermoregulation and liplolysis have to do with muscle hypertrophy?
True, my response was to LAM's, considering that he rebutted my fat loss suggestion during his first portion of his response i assumed he was reubbting the remaining portion of my suggestion (muscle hypetrophy).Duncans Donuts said:Where was that correlation made
The question initially was regarding fat loss...
Machher said:The comparison can not to be made. These types of athletes are of 2 completely different builds. Most olympic swimmers are visibly muscular where as olympic sprinters are generally very skinny. Also running requires mainly only legs during the workout where as swimming is a full body workout no matter what speed stroke; especially butterfly.
What would thermoregulation and liplolysis have to do with muscle hypertrophy?
lol true, i had mixed up endurance runners with sprintersLAM said:and the comparison has been made there are studies out there...![]()
are you on crack ? what olympic sprinters have you been watching ? most are skinny...yea right, and any muscle hypertrophy observed from swimming is finite as the load can not be progressively increased...
Machher said:Though, resistance is progressivley increased as your muscles gain mass, so does the amount of friction since there is a greater surface area. Gains are minimal but progressive.
Machher said:Though, resistance is progressivley increased as your muscles gain mass, so does the amount of friction since there is a greater surface area. Gains are minimal but progressive.
One who has been swimming for their whole life is clearly more visibly buff than one who has been running their whole life (assuming both of these athletes dont weight train).
Machher said:Though, resistance is progressivley increased as your muscles gain mass, so does the amount of friction since there is a greater surface area. Gains are minimal but progressive.
Machher said:LOL, you caught me bullshitting through my ass
had to pull out something, i hate being wrong![]()
Machher said:...olympic sprinters are generally very skinny..
Machher said:flippers dont increase or decrease resistance. They add more pushing force: properlling you through the water faster.
Different strokes could help you intensify the workout.
Skulling is a great forearm stroke (both feet first or head first)
Only arm front crawl / back crawl and removing legs (or vice versa) etc..