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Is there a backlash against it, for what reason sorry if it's a hi-jack, I like it & record my rides with it.For those who have not yet quit strava, a few things I found recentlys
Is there a backlash against it, for what reason sorry if it's a hi-jack, I like it & record my rides with it.For those who have not yet quit strava, a few things I found recentlys
Can't ever imagine wanting to be serious when cycling, so probably not for me.it's the best app for serious cyclists .... I use it daily
as for relive, it's great (still new though and it will be great if it shows a 3-D image that shows the terrain/elevations.... here is a recent Relive of one of my rides:
https://www.relive.cc/view/716278096
Is there a backlash against it, for what reason sorry if it's a hi-jack, I like it & record my rides with it.
That is why I use it, just to keep a log of what I'm doing, I do think it's fun to sometimes see how quick other people do a segment, but I don't have a competitive bone in my body so it never bothers me if somebody can do it faster than I can. Although there is a very short off road downhill section with a blind bend I ride, takes me 29 seconds with brown shorts moments, the KOM is 15 seconds, how that was achieved is anybody's guessFor most Strava is a great way to simply log your rides and see perhaps see improvements on times of segments. It can however stop the enjoyment of pure riding perhaps, the putting pressure on yourself to beat the best times of a segment for example. I doubt I will quit it, but I may stop sharing my rides for next year as I don't need Kudos marks to keep cycling.
Is there a backlash against it, for what reason sorry if it's a hi-jack, I like it & record my rides with it.
I live in Cambridge .... it's as flat as a pancake here ....
Oh no does this mean I could be even slower than I thinkHere's another thing it can do: make you seem a lot faster than you actually are!
My cycling buddy always seems to record much higher average speeds than me, even on the same ride! I think I have figured out why, after checking out his latest ride. His average speed was recorded as 18.5 mph, and having ridden with him regularly that seemed a tad high. So I looked at his Strava trail in more detail and found this:
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A touch of corner cutting! When I used the elevation track below the map, the blue dot cleary indicates that Strava is including the distance in his ride, but not the time. This happened about 6 times on his 40 mile ride. He uses his phone rather than a Garmin, maybe that has something to do with it? Anyway, he is about to get a severe slagging from me after all the "why are you so slow?" abuse I have taken since he discovered Strava a few years ago!
How many other Strava users are under the impression that they are faster than they actually are though?
It would be if all you're doing is twatting about on the Busway. If you was a serious cyclist, you'd be heading heading South and West for less pancake-y riding.
Great decision, I bought a Garmin Edge 1000 and it's a great bit if kit. It's really quite exciting exploring a new route for the first time along roads that you've never seen before safe in the knowledge that the SatNsv will get you back home again. The only pit fall I've encountered so far is that when planning a new route I sometimes inadvertently include dirt tracks in the route which are not appropriate for road bikes. So after riding a new route for the first time I sometimes need to tweak it a bit.I know .... that's why I am getting the Garmin Edge 1000 at the end of October ... I get hopelesly lost and even get lost in my village. I have been doing some shorter rides around my area especially towards Newton and Fowlmere.... (15-25km) .... there's some small hills, but it's better than nothing
Once I have the Garmin 1000, I will ride some longer routes (I have loads of routes that the Cambridge Cycle club use, and will also look at routes from other clubs as St Ives etc
I know .... that's why I am getting the Garmin Edge 1000 at the end of October ... I get hopelesly lost and even get lost in my village. I have been doing some shorter rides around my area especially towards Newton and Fowlmere.... (15-25km) .... there's some small hills, but it's better than nothing
Once I have the Garmin 1000, I will ride some longer routes (I have loads of routes that the Cambridge Cycle club use, and will also look at routes from other clubs as St Ives etc
You can make routes up with Strava and use that. Head West from you and you have the delights of Chapel Hill in Haslingfield, and the ridge that runs through Wimpole Hall (Croydon Hill) for starters. Further South Towards Royston is Great Chishill which is fairly lumpy.