Learn
Electrolytes Before, During and After Training: Timing Your Hydration Properly
Electrolyte timing depends on the session. This guide explains when to use electrolytes before, during and after training, why sweat loss changes hydration needs, and when water alone may be enough.
Read moreabout Electrolytes Before, During and After Training: Timing Your Hydration Properly
What Makes a Good Intra-Workout Hydration Formula? Electrolytes, Osmolytes and Label Transparency
A good intra-workout hydration formula is not just flavoured electrolytes. It should be built in layers: fluid balance, sweat replacement, osmolyte support, performance support, drinkability and full label transparency.
Isotonic, Hypotonic and Hypertonic Drinks: What’s the Difference for Athletes?
Isotonic, hypotonic and hypertonic drinks are built for different jobs. This guide explains how drink concentration affects hydration, fuel, electrolytes and performance, and how to choose the right format for your training.
Read moreabout Isotonic, Hypotonic and Hypertonic Drinks: What’s the Difference for Athletes?
What Electrolytes Do You Lose in Sweat? Sodium, Chloride, Potassium and Magnesium Explained
Sweat is mostly water, but it also contains electrolytes. This guide explains which minerals you lose when you sweat, why sodium and chloride matter most, and how to think about hydration during harder training sessions.
Why Sodium Helps Hydration: Fluid Balance, Nerve Signals and Performance
Sodium is often misunderstood, but in the right context it is one of the most important electrolytes for hydration. This guide explains how sodium supports fluid balance, nerve signalling and training performance, especially when sweat loss is high.
Read moreabout Why Sodium Helps Hydration: Fluid Balance, Nerve Signals and Performance
Electrolytes Explained: The Chemistry of Sodium, Potassium, Magnesium and Chloride
Electrolytes are charged minerals that help control fluid balance, nerve signalling and muscle function. This guide explains the key electrolytes behind hydration and performance, including sodium, potassium, magnesium, chloride and calcium.
Read moreabout Electrolytes Explained: The Chemistry of Sodium, Potassium, Magnesium and Chloride








