| 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. |
| | |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
#1
| |||
| |||
I have ordered a Powermeter for my road bike in hopes of getting more efficient and organized about training, something I have not done before. I am reading "Training and Racing with a Power Meter" and understand that I need to figure out my ftp and other stats. However, I was wondering if, you could help me prepare for the arrival of my power meter by giving me a general idea what my fall, winter, and spring training plans and periodizations might look like. My goal is to improve my power on steep technical sections of the mountain bike trails in Colorado which I frequently climb. I also would like to develop power and endurance for several events (road and mountain bike) I could enter next summer: The Mount Evans Hill Climb (27 miles gaining 6,700 feet from 7,500 feet to 14,200 feet on road), Triple Bypass (120 miles on road going over three mountain passes gaining 10,000 feet in elevation), and either the Silver Rush 50 (50 mile mountain bike ride) or Breckenrige B-68 (68 mile mountain bike ride). Both mountain bike rides are over high altitude rough mountain bike trails with lots of climbing. My goal is not to compete but rather to finish the events in good form and enjoy strenous climbing in my area during the season. I plan on purchasing a computrainer for winter training and Training Peaks software. I am ok with purchasing training plans, though I'm not sure which ones and when to use them. Ideally I'd self coach. Thanks in advance for your input. A bit more about me..... I live in Colorado at approximately 5600 feet and have access to strenuous roads and trails with significant elevation gains. Flat roads are not common where I'm at though some are 2% grade. I have been road and mountain bike riding with a heart rate for many years though I have never been organized about training. I have done two centries. One mountainous. I've ridden up Mount Evans before. I tend to focus on climbing road and difficult mountain bike trails. I don't necessarily have a climber's physique. My climbing focus seems more related to my willingness to push myself. I'm 37 years old, male, 5'7'' 155lbs with ~10% body fat. I'm not adverse to weight lifting. In the past, I've ridden in a unstructured manner almost daily during the riding season so I'm in realitively good fitness. I am planning on 10-14 hours per week. I work 40-45 hours a week. I tend to do pretty well with altitude but obviously better with training up high. Oh..it would be cool if I could at least go on one or two mountain bike climbs each week as part of my plans. Thanks. Last edited by mcdelroy; 07-26.-2009 at 05:09 PM. |
|
#2
| |||
| |||
Perhaps I made it seem like I'm asking for a lot. I'm willing to do research and purchase plans and possibly even look into coaching. I'm just hoping to get pointed in the right direction on guidance on how to periodize my training to balance improved power for short bursts along with improved endurance for climbs of a couple hours. |
|
#3
| |||
| |||
A lot of the regulars are out riding. But I'd suggest reading the book, ride, re-read the book, ride, spend countless hours doing searches on the forum, and then ride. Figure out you FTP through one of the many protocols you will read about and then re-read the book, ride, and do some more searches and make sure while doing the searches you are not 'snacking' too much and don't forget to ride.
__________________ -Meek "Some people train to look pretty. I just train so I can be the strongest man there is. And then again, I'm already pretty." -Magnus Samuelsson |
|
#4
| ||||
| ||||
I have a couple questions for you - one, what part of the country do you live in, and two, when were you planning on beginning the training? If these events are next seasons' events (summer, etc), that would affect how and when you would set up your cycles. I give you kudos for deciding to train indoors with something that provides a power reading as well as using virtual rides to pass the time. We (at Cycling Fusion) also believe that is key to maximum performance.
__________________ Gene Nacey, MHA Certified USA Cycling Coach Master Instructor; Heart Zones Cycling & Power Training http://www.cyclingfusion.com Owner of Global Ride Training Center http://www.globalride.org Always finish strong! |
|
#5
| |||
| |||
Quote:
Of course, a longer crank may not be a realistic option; but, you won't know unless you try. |
|
#6
| |||
| |||
Search these forums and elsewhere for SST (Sweet Spot Training) as a way to increase sustainable power. That's the basis for everything you mention from Mt. Evans to your MTB climbs and the foundation that everything else builds on. In a nutshell SST work boils down to training in such a way that you accumulate a lot of quality time with focused riding at Tempo and above. It's not short gut busting intervals nor long slow miles but attempts to find the balance that yields a lot of quality work during your week and across the weeks and months. But for the MTB racing in particular you'll also want to build on that foundation with high end work, particularly high end work that emphasizes recovery from frequent bursts and high torque accelerations like you'll encounter on rocky technical single track climbs. But again that builds on top of a foundation of solid metabolic fitness or sustainable power or high FTP in power speak. Search for Charles Howe's excellent primer on power based training for cycling that incorporates philosophies stemming back to Arthur Lydiard. Check out the resources over at the TrainingPeaks site: Power 411, How to train with WKO+ Software and a power meter , search for information on quadrant analysis, particularly as it relates to MTB riding and Frank Overton's thoughts to SST: Sweet Spot Training | FasCat Coaching :: Cycling Coach for all Cyclists There's a wealth of good information out there, and you'll almost certainly see improvement moving from JRA to structured training. But the bottom line is that sustainable power should be your priority and will help you across the board but that your specialty (MTB racing) has additional demands that build on top of that. Good luck, -Dave |
|
#7
| |||
| |||
I live in Kansas and trained for the Triple Bypass a few years back. Dave's right that it really all comes down to sustainable aerobic power (FTP) regardless of the terrain profile or elevation. I used a heartrate monitor at the time, but had a lot of success from long (20-30 minute) intervals near threshold intensity on the indoor trainer, which translated well despite not having any long climbs locally to train on. |
|
#8
| |||
| |||
Quote:
Is there a limit to how much speed improvement can be gained through using longer and longer crankarms, and if so, which length is the fastest? |
|
#9
| ||||
| ||||
Quote:
I didn't test on multiple days on the time trial bike but from looking from result sheets and comparing times against those I completed against on a fairly regular basis I believe there was some improvement in the order of ~20 seconds over a 25mile TT when moving from 175mm to 185mm. When temperatures cool down in the sunny Sacramento Valley I'll probably go out and test on the adjustable PowerCranks that I have - they allow easy adjustment from less than 100mm to 220mm without having to remove the cranks from the bottom bracket. I messed around with this last year but only did one session - I'd prefer several tests over the course of the week to find out what works best for me on a consistent basis... Right now I couldn't even contemplate riding anything over 175mm on the drops or in a tucked TT position due "logistical" reasons. I've shyed away from using the 185s recently due to lower backpain and riding cranks of that length was harder when learning to ride on the PowerCranks. I put it back to 175 and haven't got around to changing it. I was ~20lbs heavier when the PC's went on, so maybe the "deminishing gut" with help that particular situation. As they say, there's only one way to find out. |
|
#10
| |||
| |||
Quote:
It'd be fun to see someone riding 220mm cranks. Personally, I've never used anything but 175mm, so maybe there's something to it. Last edited by frenchyge; 07-30.-2009 at 11:28 AM. |
|
#11
| |||
| |||
Quote:
I'm 5'9" tall & my riding position has d-/evolved to become what I will refer to as more COPPI than KOPS. I'll leave it up to your imagination to decide what that means. My current preferred, "normal" ROAD length is now 177.5mm! And, I recently set up one bike with 180mm cranks (a SS for climbing [see fuzzy attachment]) ... Could I ride with a longer crankarm length? Maybe, maybe not. Fortunately for me, 180mm seems to be as long a crank as I can comfortably ride with because the cost of longer cranks seems to become even more astronomical than the cost of 177.5mm & 180mm cranks AND the choices are fewer; so, my wallet is safe from further crankarm length testing. Even so, I still have one bike with 170mm cranks because I just haven't bothered to change them, yet, and the length is still "okay" for Flatlander riding (I've gotta sell those cranks & some 172.5mm cranks, too!) ... okay, it has been noted that the function of gears is to allow one to negotiate varying terrain, so, presuming the bikes I have which still have shorter crankarms have appropriate gearing, there is no reason why I couldn't still ride them on mountain roads, too ... just not as quickly for the same amount of effort. |
|
#12
| |||
| |||
6' 1" tall. 175mm cranks came on my bikes (based on the frame size) - there wasn't any selection process involved in my part. It just seemed odd to see "use longer cranks" as general advice to make someone to go faster. Are you saying that you used a formula or some other method to find an optimal crank length for you, and then switched and picked up speed because of it? Edit: oops, our posts crossed. Sorry, but this part is just scientifically incorrect: Quote:
|
|
#13
| |||
| |||
Quote:
No ratios. I determined the current maximum crankarm length that 'I' can comfortably ride with by trial-and-error ... that's the expensive way to do it! My parochial, personal experience has taught me that the formulas for crank arm length seem to be arbitrary. They are only a simple ratio which does not take into account that the leg has three levers of varying proportions ... and so, the formulas are probably not optimized for anyone other than a small segment of society ... Consequently, I can't say which crank length is faster-or-fastest for a given individual because people are not the same for a given height ... and, I think that riding position & flexibility/conditioning will be significant factors in determining how long a crank arm any particular individual can realistically ride with ... I could show you the arithmetic that I used to assure myself that using a longer crankarm wasn't just some delusion, but there are so many paid experts like Lennard Zinn who I think previously declared that he couldn't (or, didn't know how to ... apologies to Zinn if he wasn't the person I'm thinking of) calculate the advantage difference of using different length crankarms ... so, I'll just let the engineers in the Forum try to reverse engineer the simple calculations. Here's the hint -- my original calculations determined that while a longer crank had to travel a greater distance per rotation, the net positive yield of a 175mm crank over a 170mm crank was a ~2.5% advantage ... If you need a conceptual assumption, then just look at the difference in effort that it takes to turn an on-off switch with a knob vs. the same switch without the knob. |
|
#14
| |||
| |||
Quote:
It'd be a shame for all the pros to figure out that they could ride faster by simply using longer cranks, so don't worry, your secret's safe with me. |
|
#15
| |||
| |||
Quote:
While the calculations are simple, you're ratio is an over simplification; and, actual calculations were made. BTW. The secret is already out. Based on the height of the/(a) typical Tour rider (e.g., Leipheimer - my recollection is that his previously recorded height was 5'7"; so, their inseam must be shorter than your's) AND one common formula, the fore mentioned rider would probably use a cranklength of UNDER 170mm. I doubt that Leipheimer (to continue to use the same individual) uses a 165mm +/- crank; so, undoubtedly many Tour riders do use the longer cranks than some forumlas calculate. I reckon that Pantani's cranks were 180mm (or, longer custom length cranks) based on anyalzing a photo of one of his actual bikes (obviously, analyzing a picture is not as good as taking a tape measure to the crank arm & actually measuring it AND my analysis could be terribly incorrect). Contador looks like another 'short' rider ... I doubt his cranks are under 170mm in length, but perhaps they are! Perhaps ALL THREE of the fore mentioned riders, amongst others, use the crank length formulas and thereby use the appropriately short crankarms for their height!?! Obviously, the three fore mentioned riders are amongst the shorter riders, but at what height is a 175mm crankarm an acceptable calculated length? |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Tags |
| colorado, mountainous, planning, riding |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
| |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:07 PM.
Powered by: vBulletin Copyright © 2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.3.0
Copyright © 2001 - 2009 cyclingforums.com
Powered by: vBulletin Copyright © 2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.3.0
Copyright © 2001 - 2009 cyclingforums.com














Linear Mode

















