I'm going to buy myself a cycle computer with cadence.
I see from reading other posts that most people spin at around 90rpm. Can you explain to me how I would get to this target. Would I have to start in a lower gearing and build up from there?
I do try my best to spin but I think that really I tend to grind through the gears
Thanks
Wait till you get the cadence sensor and have some idea of your current rpm, 90 rpm really isnt that fast, you might already be close to this without realising.
But essentially, you will shift down to a gear that you can spin at ~90 rpm and if your cadence slows by a notable amount, drop to an easier gear, if your cadence rises, shift to a harder gear, just like a cars rev counter. With some experience you will naturally gravitate toward a certain cadence and will natural shift to conserve it.
If you cant spin at 90 rpm already, then build up increasing your cruising cadence over a period of time, its really not rocket science.
I spin at about 90-100 naturally now, without any deliberate effort to learn to spin, I think it just comes with experience. I can spin quite fast when required due to riding fixed gear a lot.
edit: As for cadence computers, for me I wouldnt bother with anything less than a Garmin, for several reasons, one being that instantanious readings and average have limited use, speed, cadence, HR, time, distance, etc should be reviewed in context and cross referenced to extract most useful data, secondly I tend to look at the data after the event and only glance during, but cateye make some computers with cadence that dont cost a lot.