bobinski
Legendary Member
- Location
- Tulse Hill
Good point, I've never tried to ride at altitude.
Also, when the gradient gets really steep I find handling the bike becomes really quite difficult. On Salcombe Road Hill out of Sidmouth, when it hit 18%-20% I found it quite hard to keep the front wheel on the ground, and was too scared to stop as I was sure I would fall before I could unclip my pedals. It was one of the most stressful things I have ever done, especially since my heart rate was 185 (not bad for a at the time fairly unfit 52 year old).
On the bkool simulator it was a doddle, perfectly horizontal and bolted to the frame, I was free to put every ounce of effort into pushing the pedals round.
Anyone on here done any of the big Alpine climbs in the real world, particularly d'Huez or Ventoux?
Cheers,
Geoff
Hi Geoff,
I have not done those you mentioned but have done Col de L'Iseran
http://www.climbbybike.com/climb.asp?Col=Col-de-lIseran&qryMountainID=16
Its not the distance from Bourg, some 40 plus km that got me because I had time to recover, nor the gradient but indeed the height especially after Tignes. The air cooled quite dramatically and was obviously thinner. I have been in the Himalayas close to Everest base camp and then walked over the highest navigable pass and whilst oxygen deficit was clearly not as pronounced it was noticeable.