WORKOUT DESCRIPTIONS
QUICK START
QUICK START is the fastest way to begin exercising, and it bypasses the specific steps of selecting a specific workout pro- gram. After the QUICK START button (Touchscreen Display), a MANUAL workout begins. For Calories Burned/Calories per Hour to be computed and displayed during a workout, select the ENTER WEIGHT button which is required to calculate these values.
The speed is set to the minimum level. To change the speed and stay in the Workout Progress screen, press the SPEED but- ton or the corresponding UP and DOWN ARROW KEYS on the Touchscreen Display.
The incline level is set to zero by default. To change the incline and stay in the Workout Progress screen, press the INCLINE button or the corresponding UP and DOWN ARROW KEYS on the Touchscreen Display.
CLASSIC WORKOUTS
MANUAL
The MANUAL program is a constant effort workout in which the user can change resistance level or speed at any time.
RANDOM
The RANDOM program creates a terrain of hills and valleys that varies with each workout. More than one million differ- ent patterns are possible.
HILL
The Life
The HILL workout goes through four phases, each marked by different intensity levels. The CLASSIC PROFILE WINDOW dis- plays the progress of these phases. As noted in the descriptions below, the heart rate should be measured at two stages in the workout to gauge its effectiveness. Wear the chest strap or continuously grip the LifepulseTM handles. The Message Area does not display a request for a heart rate measurement, as it does with CARDIO, FAT BURN and the HEART RATE ZONE TRAINING programs.
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2Plateau increases the intensity slightly, and keeps it steady, to bring the heart rate to the low end of the target zone. Check the heart rate at the end of this phase
3Interval Training is a series of increasingly steeper hills, alternating with valleys, or stints of recovery. The heart rate should rise to the high end of the target zone. Check the heart rate at the end of this phase.
3
Each column, as seen in the CLASSIC PROFILE WINDOW and the chart above, represents one interval. The overall duration of the workout determines the length of each interval. Each workout is made up of 20 intervals, so the duration of each interval is equal to the duration of the entire workout divided by 20.
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