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Using the gerkin fitness test, Chapter five: gerkin fitness test – True Fitness ES9.0 + ES7.0 User Manual

Page 47

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ES Treadmills Owner’s Guide

47

Using The Gerkin Fitness Test

Chapter Five: Gerkin Fitness Test

One way to measure your overall fitness is to take a Gerkin fitness

test. Named after the Arizona researcher who designed this test,

this submaximal treadmill test (submaximal means you work below

maximum effort) is used to predict VO2 max: the volume of oxygen

you can consume while exercising at your maximum capacity. This

particular test has gained great popularity in the firefighter and law

enforcement community. Like most fitness tests, it is classified as

a graded exercise test (GXT). The test is stopped at the point your

heart rate reaches 85% of your age-predicted maximum.

Select the Gerkin test under the Advanced Options key. Enter your

age, which is used to calculate your test termination point.

The Gerkin protocol starts

at 4.5 miles per hour at a 0%

incline. It then increases speed

or incline every 60 seconds. For

example, at the seven-minute

mark, the speed increases to 6

miles per hour while the incline

raises to 8%.

When your heart rate reaches

85% of your age-predicted

maximum, the test waits for

your heart rate to exceed the

target for 15 seconds, then

terminates the test.

Using the

Gerkin Test

The version of the Gerkin
Protocol that TRUE Fitness
uses in its exercise machines
is the new equation of
205.8 – 0.685*age. To better
understand why we selected
this method over the
outdated “220 – age” maximal
heart rate equation, you can
review the scientific paper in
Journal of Exercise Physiology,
a PDF document located at
http://asep.org/Documents/
Robergs2.pdf