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berty bassett

Legendary Member
Location
I'boro
Berty, I thought you need surgery. That shoulder didn't look like anything physical therapy could help.
she didnt touch shoulder - i still can't turn neck , she has told me that i have found a way around the neck pain by locking top half of back - she was trying to unlock my back before she can work on neck - she said she was working at 10% power and i am throwing painkillers down !
got to wait for scan on shoulder but god knows when
 

<Tommy>

Illegitimi non carborundum
Location
Camden, London
i think we were all a bit late to jump on the athlete boat but it just interests me
if i was to go on watts , they vary so much i would get lost
up hill i know the watts and heart rate i feel i can maintain for a while but once you start going downhill or flat then i can get heart rate going bonkers but watts are no where near the same ? is it a case of just knowing what you can do on certain gradients
old in the tooth but willing to learn !

If I’m putting out 500 watts on the flat or uphill it’s the same in the sense I know there’s a limit for how long I can produce until my legs say enough. You and me are built differently obviously Berty. The longer the hill the bigger the edge you have. The longer the downhill or flat perhaps the reverse. So maybe our coping strategy and race dynamic should be different too? I don’t know.... and I don’t think we’ve really mentioned cadence either. I’m very aware of the ratio of watts vs cadence. I think it’s because I was a smoker for so long I historically relied on power over lungs. I want to push out as much power as possible without fatiguing my legs. So I check my cadence as much as my watts probably. I know my own sweet spots so to speak. Hopefully my thresholds improve overtime but I vaguely know my upper limits. If I’m spinning at 115-120rpm then I’m going to blow up some point soon! If I’m grinding at 75 ish rpm then I’m probably being short sighted and my legs will suffer prematurely. Probably vague examples but the more you look at your watts and rpm the more you understand your own motor. I don’t really ever think to look at mph unless I’m looking at pb’s.

These are just the musings of an average joe though.... I’d be interested to hear the thought process from someone at the sharp end.
 

bobinski

Legendary Member
Location
Tulse Hill
Thanks - spotted that and it does work :okay: Maybe others (@bobinski ) should do the same

Nah, hardly any of mine are questionable now and those that remain from the pro days will be bearen by Xmas because they are on the zsun training regime.:tongue: I just need to get the Tron bike first, hopefully by 18th^_^
 

<Tommy>

Illegitimi non carborundum
Location
Camden, London
Yep it is just too tempting :smile: I managed to do a 5-6 week TR block but am now treating myself with a couple of weeks racing. The plan is then to go back to another TR block.

Any chance you do a TR course but just scratch the racing itch once a week? I’m hoping to manage this but I’ve no experience.
 

bobinski

Legendary Member
Location
Tulse Hill
B8723377-317C-409B-93E6-5CE1AAC13196.png
WBR 4 lap flat
 

bobinski

Legendary Member
Location
Tulse Hill
Tommy, you rode with an old British Pro- Adrian Timmis.

Lots of sand baggers in B and as it turns out C too!
 
OP
OP
C

CXRAndy

Guru
Location
Lincs
Flat courses with fast C categories riders will expose the sandbagging riders. They have to go over 3.1W/Kg to keep up.

Re cadence and power. High cadence reduces fatigue in the legs but at an expense of higher HR. I found over this winter I can produce more power whilst holding a high cadence. The difference is actually just one gear harder.
 

<Tommy>

Illegitimi non carborundum
Location
Camden, London
Flat courses with fast C categories riders will expose the sandbagging riders. They have to go over 3.1W/Kg to keep up.

Re cadence and power. High cadence reduces fatigue in the legs but at an expense of higher HR. I found over this winter I can produce more power whilst holding a high cadence. The difference is actually just one gear harder.

It’s funny. Most 11-28 cassettes jumps from 15 to 17 teeth. When I’m flying around Regent’s Park I often with I had the 16t as the gear either side just feels a little the wrong side of perfect for me.
 
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