🚴 Treadmill Training Converter
Not just a converter — a full treadmill training tool with level, age, effort %, and incline adjustment.
Training mode uses your goal event, effort %, level, and age — just like the Pace Calculator.
Sprints: seconds (11.50). Distance: min:sec (2:10.00).
The % your coach prescribed. 90% = 10% slower than race pace.
1% simulates outdoor air resistance. Each 1% adds ~5% energy cost.
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MPH
“Set the incline to 1% minimum to simulate outdoor air resistance. Flat treadmill running is easier than outdoor track running because there’s no wind drag. For sprint work over 12 MPH, train outdoors — most treadmills can’t keep up with real sprint mechanics. The treadmill is best for tempo runs, steady-state aerobic work, and rainy days.”
Treadmill vs Track — What You Need to Know
Why 1% incline? Research by Jones & Doust (1996) showed that a 1% treadmill incline accurately compensates for the lack of air resistance indoors. At speeds above 7 MPH, flat treadmill running is measurably easier than outdoor running.
Incline energy cost: Each additional 1% of incline adds approximately 5% to energy expenditure at the same speed. Running 8 MPH at 5% incline feels roughly equivalent to running 10.4 MPH on flat ground.
Speed limits: Most home treadmills max at 12 MPH (4:58/mile). Commercial gym treadmills go to 15 MPH (4:00/mile). Sprint-specific treadmills are rare and expensive. For speeds faster than 12 MPH, use the track.
When to use the treadmill: Tempo runs (75-85% effort), easy recovery runs (60-70%), and threshold intervals (80-90%) all translate well. Sprint work under 200m and race-specific max efforts are better on the track where you can practice real racing mechanics.
Treadmill vs outdoor feel: Treadmill pace feels easier than outdoor pace at the same speed because the belt does some of the work pulling your foot back. The 1% incline compensates for this, but your running form is still slightly different. Don’t do all your training indoors.