| Power Training This is the place to talk about training and racing with power (watts) measuring devices such as Polar 710/720, Power Tap, SRM or any other power measuring device. |
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#1
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I'll try to make this as general a question as possible so it is not interpreted as seeking specific coaching advice (but of course I will use any feedback as I think my way through my particular issue ). Reading Allen/Coggan book I believe I understand the value of interval training on FTP and the value of VO2 max training as explained. But it seems to me the VO2 max training is responding to the racer need for accelerations and the dynamic nature of the race. Some of us, like me, don't race. My efforts are geared to hill climb rides (such as our famous Northwest ride next week- Ride Around Mt Rainier in One Day [RAMROD] a 140 mile 10,000 foot climbing ride - with 3 significant segments of 6-10 miles each at 6% or so grade. I climb these at around 85% of FTP. So in terms of training I have been doing the intervals 1x week to raise FTP and the hill repeats to raise VO2max (based on recommendation of former coach). But now he wonders - given I do not do any real dynamic racing (except for the weekend club ride) - why am I doing these VO2max workouts. Would I be better off doing the intervals 2x a week? The general question therefore is given the goal - is there more value in raising FTP through doing interval workouts 2xweek or does VO2max work contribute to raising FTP enough that it is worth doing even if the goal does not involve the dynamic race component? thanks for any feedback!
__________________ "Over the Hill......and on to the next one". |
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#2
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So if you ride with others in RAMROD or other rides and they hit a steep section pretty hard you may need VO2 Max fitness to stay with them on short hard sections. That's where racers need this capability for 3 to 5 minute hard efforts. The other situation is if you can't seem to push your FTP any higher with L4 work. Especially if your FTP efforts are fairly close to your VO2 max efforts in power terms. In that case you may be running out of aerobic headroom and may need to bump up your VO2 Max fitness to be able to bring your FTP any higher. -Dave |
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#3
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seems sensible - thanks. SO what would an acceptable gap be to say there is enough headroom and it is ok to focus on intervals. For example right now my FTP is around 290 and I do VO2 max intervals (6 @ 5 min each) at 340-350 - so up to 20% above ftp.
__________________ "Over the Hill......and on to the next one". |
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#4
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To me that indicates your FTP is not close to being limited by either Vo2max or power@Vo2max. Just o/o interest how many rows is your 5MP above/below your FTP in the Power_profiling tables? That's another thing to look at. I'd guess it's higher ... IME FTP can be built quite a lot w/o doing any structured L5 work but I realize I could be an exception to the general rule. My 5MP was historically (five years of data) 2-3 rows above FTP in the p-p tables but now it's a full four rows below. This is after close to a year of focusing on FTP with only ad-hoc L5 training (and above). I think of it as a push-up rather than pull-up approach.
__________________ rmur |
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#5
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Quote:
~Nick |
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