For the percentage variance from the different variables was demonstrated that participants played major role, which is the the desirable result for reliability purposes; the larger the percentage of variance explained by the participants facet, the higher the reliability will be. In both the walking and jogging trials the participants facet by itself or its interactions explained most of the variance. After the results from the G-study it was expected that the reliability coefficients would be high and for both walking and jogging trials only two or fewer trials were necessary to obtain reliable measurements of step counts, speed, stride length, and stride rate. This shows that in this population those measurements are stable.