I've recently been using my treadmill more because of the cold weather outside and because it is easier for me to get motivated. I wanted to know if using a treadmill was more or less the same as outdoor running. I know treadmill running is usually flat but other than that, are there any downsides to running on one?
Hi,
Well I am about to point out the obvious, but the most obvious difference is how you can keep a constant speed on a treadmill and how your speed can vary so much running in the street.
As far as downsides and upsides to one or the other, I think it all depends on your personal preference. I enjoy running outside more but a treadmill works up a better running pace.
I am no expert....I'm sure there are some out there (particularly if you scan the Runners World blogs) but running on a TM is very different from running outside. No wind, no variance in terrain, no dogs nipping at your heels. The treadbelt itself basically helps you along too. That being said, I think a TM is a great tool for those of us in the great hinterlands. My advice is to make sure you are always raising your grade at least 1%...there are training programs that will have you going from 1% to 8% grade to mimic outdoor running. I'm waiting to get a book on treadmill training from the good ole library, and I've read alot of great workouts on Runners World. I've been forced to do a 13 mile training run on a TM, but wanted to stick a fork in my eye, but at least I got the mileage in!
Here's to the monotony of winter training!
hi, i also think this is just personal preference. I know a woman who is very fast, placing in most marathons she runs, who always trains on a treadmill.... but i really dislike them. I say get on a hat, scarf, gloves, and as many layers as you need to run outside. Treadmill just arn't natural. Running outside is a way to cope with stress and enjoy nature and think. There are too many distractions with those treadmills.....
I personally hate running on tredmills. One, there is almost no motivation, as you're not doing a route or anything, you are just running in place.
Another big downside is the fact that in outdoor running, taking long strides is bad, whereas it is helpful in tredmill running to take large steps, because more of the belt moves below you. If you get too used to running on a tredmill, running outside will become more difficult for you when it matters, like in the marathons and races.
There are some excellent (and rather detailed, scientific) articles out there on treadmill running, and Timothy Noakes' book, Lore of Running, does spend some time discussing the research on it.
I think the biggest difference in TM running vs real running is that when running on a treadmill, your centre of gravity doesn't move. This, as a result, doesn't have the same physiological affects that real running does - not the same muscle groups, not the same amount of strain on the muscles.... I'm no expert, but there I do know that there is definitely a real - scientifically proven - difference. Maybe it's subtle for the average runner, but it is there.
All of us in the northern climes know, however, that TM running is a necessary evil.
i think it's just that treadmills are really different from running outside. I regularly complete 6 miles in 60 minutes running outside, but switched to a treadmill due to awful weather and didn't want to miss a scheduled run, and i could barely manage 4.5miles at my usual pace.
Even if you have the incline at 1% it still doesn't equate to outdoor running as there are times when you're running slower, faster, uphill, downhill and the psychological element comes into play as well. it seems on a treadmill your always fighting against your natural rhythm and being dictated to a machine.
they are a good option to have during the winter but running outdoors in good weather is alwasys going to be the better option for me!
In my opinion running only on TM can do more harm than good. As Nasher said they are lighter on the joints and that's why they will never replace outdoor running. When You run outdoors much more joins are being used during the run, due to the obstacles You have to pass, like: puddles, potholes or icy path. Thanks to that Your joins are getting stronger and thus they became more resistant to the injuries connected with them. On a TM Your strides are basically the same all the time and some joints are not used at all!
Another difference is breathing. On a TM to breath in needed amount of oxygen, harder inhale is needed, since there is no fresh air coming to the mouth, just by opening it J So in ‘real’ running it can turn out to be difficult to get the right rhythm of breathing, what is so crucial in running.
Of course adding to this how boring TM can be for longer runs, and how workouts are easier in terms of psychology in my modest opinion treadmills can’t be compared to the outdoor running, unless someone is running only to enter more miles run to the training log. But I think running is more than that.
P.S. There is no bad weather for running, if clothing is perfectly matched!
I too hate the boredom associated with treadmills, and agree that there is a big difference between running on one and running outside. However, I really want to improve my half marathon time this October, and the only way I can get some training in on most weekdays is by using the treadmill we have in the garage.
I have found that the boredom is slightly relieved by doing intervals of say, fast pace for 3 minutes followed by slower pace for 1 minute. I am trying to do this for 40 minutes each morning and then do my longer runs outside at the weekend. I've been doing this for about 3 - 4 weeks now and my outdoor run times (I do an outdoor run on a Thursday and at the weekend, generally) have improved by a couple of minutes and I also feel stronger - I run the complete course whereas before I was walking up one of the hills.
I'm going to try the 1% gradient suggestion offered earlier too.
Treadmills can be a good training aid if you can't always get outside.
I have also read the 1% rule...in a few different places actually. I feel as junkie does...do the hills workout or do intervals at 1%. I can only handle the treadmill if I do the simulated hills, otherwise I get bored out of my skull! At least with the hill program, I feel like I am really pushing myself! Basically, you should be able to feel if you are getting as "good" a workout on the TM. Do you feel like you are pushing yourself as much as you do outdoors?
KJ
Treadmills, shreadmills. Uggghhh! Just like the majority, they bore me to death. Never once have I gotten the same result from running on a treadmill that I've gotten after a run outside. Nothing compares to the natural elements of the outdoors. And I think the main objective is to maintain fitness and part of that is keeping a healthy mind. The treadmill plays no part in keeping my mind healthy, it's torture! LOL
Your body responds better to exercise when your mind is happy during the exercise. So bottom line, run where you are comfortable and happy. :-)
I'm a beginner to running, so you should certainly take this with a grain of salt, but I've found my TM training to be a good help for my outside training. I have small children and can only run during their nap times, and running outside hasn't been as much an option for me (the authorities tend to look down on you if you go running and leave your kids on their own). Running on the 'mill has closely enough approximated the "specificity" for outside running (generally, the specificity rule says you'll only improve your cardio conditioning for any given event by training on that event, i.e. biking won't help your running time) for me to improve my time on the road. I've done lots of reading that suggests the pros and cons of TM's, and I have read journal articles that state that up to a certain speed TM's and outside running are calorically equivalent. Although you can mimic hills on the 'mill, you certainly can't mimic that feeling of a long hill unwinding in front of you and running against a 25 mph headwind with people passing you, so it may not be the best tool for race psychology prep. However, I love it for doing intervals and speed work.
And yes, it does get awfully same-y when you're stuck on it for >75% of your 30 miles/week.
An interesting article for runners with a scientific bent (and access to scientific journals). A group at the University of Virginia just published a study in the June 2008 Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise (the journal of the Am. Coll of Sports Medicine) on comparisons between treadmills and ground running. They found some interesting differences in knee kinematics (mainly, the angle the knee makes at flexion and extension) as well as quite a few kinetic parameters (things like ground reaction force, power production and moment at joints). They did find, though, that the treadmill does require the same push-off required for over-ground running, and verified previous findings that cadence speeds up and stride decreases when running on the treadmill vs. the ground.
Just some food for thought.......
These days, I face the Florida Heat and Humidity outside, rather than run on a Dreadmill. I just can't stand it.
It gets down to 40 below here...so I run on the treadmill between late November and late March.
If you put the incline at three degrees or more, it can somwhate simulate outdoor running.
Running outside hill > running outside flat > running inside > running on TM > not running
There's no way a treadmill can duplicate the run I had outdoors today. I did over 90% of my run on soft dirt. How can you make a treadmill feel like that? We all know what the advantages are too when it comes to injury while running on softer surfaces.
The one thing I really don't like about treadmills is no change of scenery. I don't want to be stuck in the same place for 1 or 2 hours. I know many treadmills have TV's in front of them, that just doesn't work for me though.
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