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Elevation Training Mask
Posted on 7/4/24 at 4:11 pm
Posted on 7/4/24 at 4:11 pm
Anyone have any experiences with these? Do they work?
I just got done with a race in Utah. I trained about as much as I could while living in the South, but I don't know how the hell to train for the altitude. The race is a little over 6 miles (loop) and gain of 3,015 ft. So, about 1,000 gain per mile.
I want to hit another in Colorado in September, and wondering if an elevation mask may be able to help in training.
I just got done with a race in Utah. I trained about as much as I could while living in the South, but I don't know how the hell to train for the altitude. The race is a little over 6 miles (loop) and gain of 3,015 ft. So, about 1,000 gain per mile.
I want to hit another in Colorado in September, and wondering if an elevation mask may be able to help in training.
Posted on 7/4/24 at 5:21 pm to lsugerberbaby
It’s a scam from most of the things I’ve read about it. Unless they’ve had some advances in the tech, the benefit from elevation training is due to the difference in air pressure, which the masks cannot replicate
Posted on 7/4/24 at 7:24 pm to lsugerberbaby
Doesn't work. At least not how they advertise. At altitude, there is actually a lower oxygen concentration in the air. The masks just restrict how much air you take in at a time. It would make the respiratory muscles physically stronger but that isn't the same thing as how your body adapts to altitude.
Posted on 7/5/24 at 8:36 am to lsugerberbaby
I’ve done a few high altitude ultra marathons.
I read a while back that training hard in high humidity can help with high altitude races. When training i did a lot of sprint workouts high heat/humidity, and have never had a problem with the altitude. Not sure if training in the high humidity helped me or not, but something you may want to do some research on.
I read a while back that training hard in high humidity can help with high altitude races. When training i did a lot of sprint workouts high heat/humidity, and have never had a problem with the altitude. Not sure if training in the high humidity helped me or not, but something you may want to do some research on.
Posted on 7/5/24 at 8:38 am to lsugerberbaby
quote:
Do they work?
No
quote:
I don't know how the hell to train for the altitude.
Altitude is really the only way but the closest we can get is heat and humidity.
The biggest difference would be hydration and electrolytes during the training.
Posted on 7/5/24 at 9:13 am to JOJO Hammer
quote:
When training i did a lot of sprint workouts high heat/humidity, and have never had a problem with the altitude
Training in the heat/ humidity, I feel, was the difference maker in last week's race. I felt great after the race, and very conditioned...but there were several times where I felt dizzy enough to stop for a break.
There's got to be some sort of chart or table that would show training in heat/ humidity to high altitude equivalence. Running during the summer in Louisiana is miserable.
I'll incorporate more sprints for this next race in September.
Posted on 7/5/24 at 8:44 pm to lsugerberbaby
I felt it helped me a little when I was preparing for my Afghanistan deployment
Posted on 7/7/24 at 11:17 pm to jdaute2
I wouldn't say it is a scam as much as falsely advertised. In no way does it mimick high elevation. There is no way for it to. However, one positive I got from it was breath work. It makes you slow your breathing down and focus on those breaths as to not get winded fast. I ran for about 2 months with one and noticed a gained endurance in races. I didn't get winded so easily. It makes you take long and efficient breaths while still performing at a high level.
This post was edited on 7/7/24 at 11:19 pm
Posted on 7/9/24 at 7:45 pm to lsugerberbaby
Maybe also try training with a weighted vest.
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