CliffyIsGod
First Grade
- Messages
- 6,454
5.8%
18.4% using my scales at home that do the electronic pulse thing.
18 years old, 83kg. Not exactly overweight but would prefer to be much less of course.
I'll try out that link when I find out tape measure.. lol.
The thing with BMI is that it assumes everyone has the same build, frame and bone density which is not true.BMI is still a perfectly good measurement for your average person.
People like to point at footballers and other heavily muscled people to show why BMI is "useless".... but on your average person who might hit the gym a couple times per week (or not) it gives a reasonable measure of your general health and well being.
Take Wii Fit for example. I've not put a family member on it who's BMI assessment turned out to be a shock. The overweight were overweight and the fit and healthy were in the right weight zone.
Once you are much more into your fitness then sure, go for a body fat percentage test etc, but for someone just starting out or only into light exercise, it works just fine IMO.
Age: 23
Weight: 94kg
You have 13% body fat.
You have 12.2 Kilograms of fat and 81.8 Kilograms of lean (muscle, bone, body water).
That's pretty good... about 3 months ago I was 77kg of non-fat mass, and 19kg of fat... So still going strong!
It's impossible to gain that much lean muscle mass in that time... If what you say is true that means you've gained 12kg of muscle mass... That is 2 years worth of muscle gain. I highly doubt your calculations are correct.