Walking, Treadmill

Walking, Treadmill is a cardio exercise using machine that trains the quadriceps.

Open in MyoAmigo →

CardioMachineBeginner

Primary muscles: Quadriceps

Secondary muscles: Calves, Glutes, Hamstrings

How to do it

  1. To begin, step onto the treadmill and select the desired option from the menu. Most treadmills have a manual setting, or you can select a program to run. Typically, you can enter your age and weight to estimate the amount of calories burned during exercise. Elevation can be adjusted to change the intensity of the workout.
  2. Treadmills offer convenience, cardiovascular benefits, and usually have less impact than walking outside. When walking, you should move at a moderate to fast pace, not a leisurely one. Being an activity of lower intensity, walking doesn't burn as many calories as some other activities, but still provides great benefit. A 150 lb person will burn about 175 calories walking 4 miles per hour for 30 minutes, compared to 450 calories running twice as fast. Maintain proper posture as you walk, and only hold onto the handles when necessary, such as when dismounting or checking your heart rate.

Track it with MyoAmigo

MyoAmigo pre-fills every set of the Walking, Treadmill from last time, charts your estimated 1RM trend so you can see strength move without testing a true max, and flags a stall with a concrete fix. It also credits this work toward your weekly Quadriceps volume on the MyoMap heatmap. New to the movement? Start with picking a working weight and progressive overload.

Related Quadriceps exercises

Machine

Air Bike (machine)

Body Only

All Fours Quad Stretch

Plyometrics

Alternate Leg Diagonal Bound

Other

Backward Drag

Barbell

Barbell Full Squat

Barbell

Barbell Hack Squat

Barbell

Barbell Lunge

Barbell

Barbell Side Split Squat

Barbell

Barbell Squat

← All exercises · Browse by muscle

iPhone · Apple Watch · Web · out now

Meet your new
training amigo.

MyoAmigo is on the App Store — free to log, sync, and keep your full history forever. Prefer the browser? Train on the web →