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  #1   ^
Old Sat, Jan-10-04, 09:51
RCFletcher's Avatar
RCFletcher RCFletcher is offline
Senior Member
Posts: 6,068
 
Plan: Food Combining
Stats: 220/175/154 Male 5feet5inches
BF:?/27.5%/19.6%
Progress: 68%
Location: Newcastle UK
Default How to measure body fat?

I’ve tried three ways of measuring body fat:

1. I got new scales for Christmas which should do it. They seem to measure how damp your feet are however! They read 28 (just out the bath and so still damp) or 31 (dead dry).

2. I’ve visited on line sites that measure your B.M.I. based on your height and weight. I come out as 31.8 – obese – boohoo – well I did know it.

3. This morning I went to www.mybodycomp.com where you take loads of measurements of different parts of your body and feed them in. It produced a figure which showed my body was made up of 25.89% fat.

Which would you trust, and which do you use?
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  #2   ^
Old Sat, Jan-10-04, 10:54
Jerry M Jerry M is offline
Registered Member
Posts: 162
 
Plan: Custom
Stats: 410/253/240 Male 72
BF:Wow/30%/???
Progress: 92%
Default

All three are wildly inaccurate, but at least the scale (electrical bioimpedance) is consistant, so you can track changes. Yes, be consistant in how you do it and what time of day etc, just get on it 3-5 times and do an average.

I use a hand model myself and are happy with the results.
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  #3   ^
Old Sat, Jan-10-04, 10:56
RoseTattoo's Avatar
RoseTattoo RoseTattoo is offline
Kid R
Posts: 1,168
 
Plan: Maintenance
Stats: // Female 5"1'
BF:Too darn much!
Progress: 90%
Location: PA
Default

RC, this is so hard. I've been trying to get an accurate measure of my bf for months. What I'd suggest is to use the same type of measurement--e.g., body fat scale, bioelectrical impedance, manual measurement--and compare the results over time. Every single style of measurement, with the possible exception of immersion in water which is very expensive--has a large margin of error. So you can't get a really trustworthy absolute measure, only a comparative one over time.

BTW, body mass index and percentage BF are two completely different standards and you really can't make much out of one standard alone. An athlete who's very muscular could have a high BMI but a very low BF%.

Another way of "ballparking" the BF stuff is just to notice how differently your clothes are fitting over time, as you lose fat and gain muscle.

HTH!
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  #4   ^
Old Sat, Jan-10-04, 12:14
potatofree's Avatar
potatofree potatofree is offline
Fully Caffeinated
Posts: 17,245
 
Plan: Back to Atkins
Stats: 298/228/160 Female 5ft9in
BF:?/35/?
Progress: 51%
Default

I use the bodyfat monitor scale. Which, BTW says in the directions that your feet should be dry....
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  #5   ^
Old Sat, Jan-10-04, 13:45
LadyBelle's Avatar
LadyBelle LadyBelle is offline
Resident Loud Mouth
Posts: 8,495
 
Plan: Retrying
Stats: 239.2/150.6/120 Female 5'2"
BF:
Progress: 74%
Location: Wyoming
Default

I use the scale, but I don't think they are that accurate, at least at higher body fat percentages. I would test my BF at night and get at times as much as 7% difference. One night I checked once, then went and watched a movie, eating nothing and just drinking water. I checked after the movie and found I'd lost 2 pounds but gained 1% BF according to the scale:P

I like the mybodycomp because it takes into effect so many different measurements instead of just hip to waist.

The only way to test for sure would be one of those water tests and that would be expencive. Just pick a method you like and stick to it. Look for drops in the number more then the number.
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  #6   ^
Old Sat, Jan-10-04, 14:57
atlee's Avatar
atlee atlee is offline
Registered Member
Posts: 1,182
 
Plan: SPII IS/BOAG
Stats: 186/136/140 Female 5' 5"
BF:A lot/18%/20%
Progress: 109%
Location: Jackson, MS
Default

The measurements aren't always that accurate if you have an abnormal body type or shape -- really short/long waisted, very muscular, unusually tall or short, etc. Sometimes you kind of have to pick the right method for you based on intuition about your body type and general toned-ness. MyBodyComp puts my LBM ~8.5 lbs lower, and my body fat 7.5% higher, than the handheld measurement gadget at the gym; but based on my general proportions, I think the lower body % is probably the right one.
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  #7   ^
Old Sat, Jan-10-04, 22:04
JohnP's Avatar
JohnP JohnP is offline
Registered Member
Posts: 99
 
Plan: Atkins
Stats: 212/175/159 Male 66 inches
BF:33/23/14
Progress: 70%
Location: Spartanburg, SC
Default

I have been using MyBodyComp since I began low carbing in August. One disappointment though. I began using this site thinking that it had to be very accurate because they required so many measurements from different body areas. Over time I noticed that some measurements made no difference in the BF calculations. In fact, height, weight, abdomen, waist, hip and knee are the only measurements required. The others are used in plotting your strong/weak points. Still, this is more than most sites use for their calculations.

Johnie

Last edited by JohnP : Sat, Jan-10-04 at 22:09.
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