SOLE E20 Owner's Manual page 26

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RATE OF PERCEIVED
EXERTION
Heart rate is important
but listening
to your body also has a lot of advantages.There
are more
variables
involved
in how hard you should
workout
than just heart rate. Your stress level,
physical
health,
emotional
health, temperature,
humidity,
the time of day, the last time you ate
and what you ate, all contribute
to the intensity
at which you should
workout.
If you listen to
your body, it will tell you all of these things.
The rate of perceived
exertion
(RPE), also know as the Borg scale, was developed
by Swedish
physiologist
G.A.V. Borg.This
scale rates exercise
intensity
from 6 to 20 depending
upon how
you feel or the perception
of your effort.
The scale is as follows:
Rating Perception
of Effort
6 Minimal
7 Very, very light
8 Very, very light +
9Very
light
10 Very light +
11 Fairly light
12 Comfortable
13 Somewhat
hard
14 Somewhat
hard +
15 Hard
16 Hard +
17 Very hard
18 Very hard +
19 Very, very hard
20 Maximal
You can get an approximate
heart
rate level for each rating
by simply
adding
a zero to each
rating.
For example
a rating
of 12 will result in an approximate
heart rate of 120 beats per
minute.Your
RPE will vary depending
up the factors
discussed
earlier.That
is the major
benefit
of this type of training.
If your body is strong
and rested, you will feel strong
and your pace will
feel easier.When
your body
is in this condition,
you are able to train harder and the RPE will
support
this. If you are feeling
tired
and sluggish,
it is because your body needs a break. In this
condition,
your pace will feel harder. Again, this will show up in your RPE and you will train at
the proper
level for that day.
E20 / E2S ELLIPTICAL
24

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