เครื่องคำนวณช่วงวิ่ง/เดิน – Galloway Method
Calculate your effective pace using Jeff Galloway's run-walk-run method. Enter your running pace and walk interval ratio to estimate finish time.
วิธีใช้เครื่องคิดเลขนี้
- ป้อนRunning Pace – Minutes
- ป้อนRunning Pace – Seconds
- ป้อนRun Interval (seconds)
- ป้อนWalk Interval (seconds)
- ป้อนRace Distance (km)
- คลิกปุ่มคำนวณ
- อ่านผลลัพธ์ที่แสดงด้านล่างเครื่องคิดเลข
The Science Behind Run-Walk Training
The run-walk method — alternating periods of running with deliberate walking — was popularized by Coach Jeff Galloway and has since been validated by exercise science as an effective strategy for beginners, marathoners, and injury-prone runners alike. Far from being a sign of weakness, strategic walking is a physiologically intelligent approach to covering long distances.
The key mechanism: walking intervals allow partial recovery of the cardiovascular system and lower limb muscles during the run. This delays the accumulation of metabolic byproducts (lactate, hydrogen ions) and reduces the repetitive stress on joints and connective tissue. Studies have shown that run-walk-run strategies at the same average pace produce less post-race muscle damage than continuous running.
Jeff Galloway's research with thousands of runners found that many first-time marathoners who followed a run-walk-run protocol finished within 30 minutes of their predicted continuous-run finish time — while experiencing significantly less post-race soreness and injury. For beginners, this trade-off is almost always worth it.
For more advanced runners, walk breaks serve a different purpose: preventing the 'moderate intensity trap' by genuinely resetting effort between hard running segments, and allowing fueling and hydration without slowing stride mechanics during gels/drink consumption.
Run-Walk Interval Ratios for Every Fitness Level
The appropriate run-walk ratio depends on your current fitness, goal event, and purpose of the training. Here's a framework:
| Runner Level | Suggested Ratio | Example | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Complete beginner | 1:2 (run:walk) | 1 min run / 2 min walk | Build base from scratch |
| Early beginner | 1:1 | 1 min run / 1 min walk | Building aerobic base |
| Intermediate beginner | 2:1 | 2 min run / 1 min walk | Transition to continuous running |
| Recreational runner | 5:1 | 5 min run / 1 min walk | Long run endurance, injury prevention |
| Half marathon finisher | 8:1 to 10:1 | 8–10 min run / 1 min walk | Extend distance safely |
| Marathon runner | 20:1 to 30:1 | 1 mile run / 30 sec walk | Walk breaks at aid stations |
| Ultra runner | Variable | Run flats/walk uphills | Effort management |
Progress from one ratio to the next only when the current ratio feels completely comfortable throughout the entire workout. For beginners, this typically means 2–3 weeks at each level before progressing. Never increase both frequency and duration simultaneously.
Calculating Average Pace with Run-Walk Intervals
One practical challenge of run-walk training is predicting your overall pace and finish time. The calculation is straightforward:
Formula: Average pace = (Run time per interval × run pace + Walk time per interval × walk pace) ÷ (Run time + Walk time)
Example: 5-minute run at 6:00/km + 1-minute walk at 12:00/km:
- Running: 5 min covers 5/6 = 0.833 km
- Walking: 1 min covers 1/12 = 0.083 km
- Total: 0.917 km in 6 min = 6:32/km average pace
Reference table — average pace with walk speed of 12:00/km:
| Run Ratio | Run Pace /km | Average Pace /km |
|---|---|---|
| 1:1 | 6:00 | 9:00 |
| 2:1 | 6:00 | 8:00 |
| 4:1 | 6:00 | 7:12 |
| 9:1 | 6:00 | 6:36 |
| 1:1 | 7:00 | 9:30 |
| 2:1 | 7:00 | 8:40 |
| 4:1 | 7:00 | 8:00 |
| 9:1 | 7:00 | 7:30 |
Couch to 5K: The Classic Run-Walk Progression
The Couch to 5K (C25K) program is the world's most popular beginner running plan, and it's built entirely on run-walk intervals. Its success lies in systematic progressive overload — increasing running volume by just enough each week to build aerobic fitness without overwhelming recovery capacity.
Classic C25K 9-week progression:
- Weeks 1–2: 1 min run / 90 sec walk × 8 (20 min sessions, 3×/week)
- Week 3: 90 sec run / 90 sec walk × 2, 3 min run / 3 min walk × 2
- Week 4: 3 min run / 90 sec walk, 5 min run / 2.5 min walk (alternating)
- Week 5: Progress to 8, 10, then 20 min continuous runs
- Week 6–7: 22, 25 min continuous
- Weeks 8–9: 28, 30 min continuous = ~5K for most runners
The transition from walking to continuous running typically happens around weeks 5–6. Many beginners find this the hardest jump — the mind gives up before the body does. The solution: run based on time, not distance or pace. 30 minutes of continuous slow running (even at 9 min/km) is better than trying to run fast and walking early.
Run-Walk for Injury Prevention and Long-Term Runners
Run-walk isn't just for beginners. Many experienced runners use it strategically for:
- Very long runs: On runs exceeding 2.5–3 hours, adding 1-minute walk breaks every 20–30 minutes significantly reduces cumulative joint stress. Most of the injury benefit occurs in the third hour and beyond.
- Post-injury return: After stress fractures, IT band syndrome, plantar fasciitis, or knee injuries, run-walk progression allows gradual load reintroduction without re-injury. Progress is slower but more sustainable than jumping back to continuous running.
- High mileage weeks: Adding walk breaks to recovery runs (replacing slow running with walk-jog) maintains training frequency while reducing weekly training stress during heavy build weeks.
- Older runners: Masters athletes (50+) often find that incorporating regular walking into long runs extends their running career by reducing the cumulative impact load on aging connective tissue. Many successful 60+ marathon runners use a run-walk strategy throughout the race.
Research from the American College of Sports Medicine found that adding walk breaks in a marathon improved finish times for runners over 4:30 by an average of 10 minutes compared to continuous running — because most slower runners have poor pacing discipline and run the first half too fast. Walk breaks enforce built-in pace control.
Race Day Run-Walk Strategy
If you plan to use run-walk intervals on race day, preparation is essential:
- Practice in training: Use the same intervals in your long training runs. Your legs should be accustomed to the transitions. Walking muscles are different from running muscles — cold walking feels strange in a race if you've never practiced it.
- Start the walk breaks early: Don't wait until you 'need' a walk break. Start your first walk break at mile 1 or 2. The benefit of run-walk comes from consistent intervals, not emergency walking when exhausted.
- Set watch alerts: GPS watches can be set to vibrate every N minutes as run-walk reminders. This removes willpower from the equation.
- Walk purposefully, not slowly: Race-pace walking at 11–12 min/mile is efficient. Don't stroll — walk briskly with active arms to maintain momentum.
- Ignore other runners: Many continuous runners will pass you during walk breaks. They may slow to your pace or slower by mile 20. Trust your strategy.
อัปเดตล่าสุด: March 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
Does run-walk running improve fitness?
Yes, especially for beginners. Run-walk intervals allow you to accumulate more total training volume than continuous running while recovering faster. For example, a beginner who can run 20 continuous minutes can often complete 40+ minutes using a 3:1 run:walk ratio, getting double the aerobic stimulus.
What is the best run-walk ratio for a marathon?
For beginners targeting 4:30–6:00 marathon: try Jeff Galloway's 30:30 seconds (1:1) or 1 mile run / 1 min walk. For experienced runners targeting sub-4:30: 9 min run / 1 min walk. For competitive recreational runners: walk through aid stations only (every 1–2 miles). The 'best' ratio is the one you've practiced in training.
How do I transition from run-walk to continuous running?
Progress gradually: once a ratio feels completely comfortable for the full duration of your planned run, increase the running segment by 1–2 minutes per week. The transition typically takes 4–8 weeks to go from 3:1 to fully continuous. Don't rush — the aerobic adaptation needed for continuous easy running takes time.
Is it bad to walk during a race?
No. Walking is a legitimate race strategy, not a failure. Many runners who use planned walk breaks from the start finish faster than those who run-until-forced-to-walk. The key difference: planned walking is strategic; reactive walking is a sign of poor pacing. Elite ultramarathon runners routinely walk uphills even at world-record pace.
Can run-walk training help with weight loss?
Yes. Run-walk training allows you to exercise longer with less fatigue, burning more total calories per session than shorter continuous runs. Additionally, high-intensity intervals (even short ones) elevate post-exercise calorie burn (EPOC). The key for weight loss is consistency — a sustainable 4-5 days/week of run-walk beats 2 days/week of exhausting continuous running.
How long should walk breaks be?
Walk breaks of 30 seconds to 2 minutes are most effective. Under 30 seconds doesn't provide meaningful recovery. Over 2 minutes can disrupt running rhythm and cool muscles too much. For beginners, 1–2 minute walks work well. For experienced runners using walk breaks for ultra or marathon endurance, 30–60 seconds is typical.
What heart rate should I target during run-walk intervals?
During running segments: aim for Zone 2–3 (65–80% max HR). During walking recovery: let heart rate drop to Zone 1 (<65% max HR). If your heart rate doesn't recover meaningfully during walk breaks, they're too short or your running intensity is too high. Adjust ratio or slow the running pace.