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#1 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3
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I keep seeing people say that you have to train different muscles to ride a 'bent. If that is so, how long would you expect the learning curve to be? Given daily rides of 10 miles or so, with two 30-40 milers a week, how long would you expect it to take to get in shape for a century? A hilly century....
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#2 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 292
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#3 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: IL, USA
Posts: 73
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For the first couple weeks you ride a recumbent a certain pair of muscles in your hips tends to ache, but not so much that you cannot do anything normally.
Your speed depends a lot on the recumbent you choose--but the caution here is that the faster recumbents (the ones with the most reclined seating positions, and the highest pedals) are also the ones that cause riders to suffer the most up hills. Even if you are slightly slower you can still ride much longer before taking a break, because the overall exhaustion level on a recumbent is much lower. A typical rider can easily go 3-4 times as far nonstop on a bent as they could on an upright bike. ~ |
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#4 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3
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Thanks for the input. I'm toying with the idea of getting a 'bent in April or May, training with it, and then doing the PMC (192 miles in two days) in August. Sounds like it is doable...
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#5 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 60
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#6 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 8
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I did 90 miles on my recumbent on virtually no training - just the odd 20 miles here and there on an upright. It took a very long time, but the following day I was the only person without an aching back, wrists, neck and...other bits. Recumbents use the opposing muscles to normal cycling, I've heard, so expect not to be very fast to begin with. Also, don't try and lean forward when going up hills, as that just strains your neck without delivering anything. Try to lean back and push your lower back into the seat. By the way, I am a 220lb female who cycles, rows and swims, so weight isn't everything!
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#7 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 60
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Diabetes, Heart disease, Stroke, ALL forms of Cancer, Arthritis, Back trouble, Sleep apnea, Alzheimer’s, the list goes on forever. All of the preceding are things that are ten times as likely to happen to you if you’re a 220 pound female. If you are average in height you’d be about 5’4”. That puts you about 100 pounds over weight. Before your next run put on a backpack with 100 pounds of weight in it. See how well you do. Now take it off and see how good it feels. Get the picture? It’s exactly the SAME THING. Fat is DEAD weight. I don't write this to be mean. I simply know that it took a few comments I found to be rude and hurtful at the time to wake me up. That was only six weeks ago and I'm down 40 pounds now. I'm running and biking like I did ten years ago now. I feel so good I have to pinch myself to make sure I'm not dreaming. My sleep apnea is gone. My severe heartburn is gone. My shortness of breath is gone. There's even an area of myself I can see now that previously required a mirror. O.K. I'll stop. |
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#8 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 8
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Ah - there's nothing like a convert for preaching! Just like the ex-smokers are the most evangelical about the evils of their former habit, this post preaches the wonders of losing weight, in terms that only a former overweight person could.
![]() While I take note of your message about the pointlessness of buying carbon fibre parts if you weigh more than a large teaspoon, and I even agree with it, I'm afraid I do take offence at your references to "your chubby little button", the "spikes in insulin", "plain dangerous" and the assumptions that I am short and 100 pounds overweight with severe health problems. Perhaps you don't write it to be mean, but I can guarantee that, reformed or not, anyone who does have weight problems would view your comments as extremely hurtful. The fact that you were once overweight yourself does NOT give you the mandate to insult anyone whom you believe to be overweight now. I know there's a tendency in some parts of the US to allow such rudeness, but in the UK it is still extremely bad form. Fortunately I'm nowhere near the chubby, slobbering couch accoutrement that you seem to believe I am. I'm a good deal taller than you imagine and virtually all the extra weight is muscle. This is not my naive assumption - it is the opinion of my doctors, dietician and physiotherapists, not to mention my rowing coaches and sprint cycling peleton. Perhaps you don't have healthy, fit people in America, but I doubt it. I reckon you've even seen some. If not, have a look at the British Olympic rowing team at the Sydney Olympics and tell me that Sir Steve Redgrave is "chubby", that his weight is "plain dangerous" and that he is ten times as likely to suffer from your exhaustive list of complaints. I don't reckon you would want to suggest to him that he should lose some weight. He weighs more than me. ![]() If I start to suffer from sleep apnoea, shortness of breath, severe heartburn then I might start to think that there's a problem. Until then, I'll live with my low cholesterol, low blood pressure and carry on rowing, cycling and swimming. I don't write this to be mean. I simply know that you made a huge assumption based on one piece of data, and used it to be offensive without the remotest clue about whom you're talking to. If you remember nothing else from this, remember not to make assumptions. ![]() Wishing you the best in your newly-discovered thinness (and I do mean that), Sebowyer. |
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#9 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 60
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I’m sorry if the truth hurts but the hardest lessons to learn are also the most valuable. Did I used to be fat? Not by your standards. I’m a 5’10” male that used to weigh about 225. Now I weigh 175 and I’m close to where I’d like to be muscle and fat percentage wise. I don’t wish to try and backtrack through all the posts but I did read my comments that you find so offensive. You have what many in the Western world now have. I call it “youhurtmyfeelings-itis.” Or, “you pushed my chubby little button and I’m going to tell on you.” (Or in the U.S. “I sue your ass.”) You failed to comment on my guess that you’re probably about 5’ 3” so I suppose I hit it pretty close. 5’3”, 220 pounds, and you’re in great shape huh? O.K. Now I know for an absolute fact that you’re a fatty. You would have never responded the weigh you did if you weren’t. (Get it? The weigh you did. Hardy harr harr har harr. Dang I crack myself up.) Get over yourself El Chubbo and lose some weight. If my “hurting your feelings” was the straw that broke the twinky’s back then I’ve done my good deed for the day. You can write ‘till the cows come home (notice the bovine similes. Yes they’re similes not metaphors.) about what great shape you’re in but we’re not buying it. You may be in great shape for a fat chick, but not great shape for someone that would like to consider themselves a competitive athlete. So, put the twinky down, throw away the clothes with elastic wastelines, and get to business girl. Stop trying to tell yourself that it’s perfectly O.K. to be Hefferesque. ( A Heffer is a cow by the way ) It’s not O.K. It’ll kill you. Hurt feelings won’t. P.S. Just think how much you’ll save on talcum powder. And I do hope you don't get any of the health related stuff that comes with obesity. That's why I'm so vocal on the issue. Don't get me wrong, I also enjoy being a total smartass. |
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#10 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 17
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I would say a month at the longest. I went from a giant ocr limited to a bacchetta strada. The biggest setback was the inferior components on the recumbent. But for a full carbon with high end components like the ocr it would be 5k. After one month I can keep up with the upright guys on the hills during a group ride and I weigh 225. I lift and train legs alot though. With this in mind I don't feel I use different muscles while riding the recumbent although perhaps this is a mistake. I just feel my quads burning after cranking the hills. The key to hills on a recumbent is to stay in as big of gear as possible on short hills and keep spinning. Once you keep shifting down and spinning you will soon find yourself at 10mph. The biggest disadvantage I see on hills is gravity. When you stand up and pedal you are assisted by your body weight and gravity while pressing down, not so on the recumbent. I don't think you could ever condition your legs enough to beat the advantage of standing up. Rather you just condition your legs better than the upright rider to even the advantage. tmq |
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#11 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 292
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Geez, norecumyet, you need to chill out. Sebowyer didn't ask for your opinion about her weight. Her point was you don't need to be rail-thin to cycle, and I agree. This article seems to back up the opinion. The good thing about getting a lighter bike is that the effects are immediate. You can always lose weight besides and get a double benefit.
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#12 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Charleston, WV
Posts: 17
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Quote:
I'm thinking of getting one myself, and need some advice: 1. How difficult is it to balance on a 'bent if you are used to a diamond frame? 2. What are the relative advantages of the three configurations? 3. Underseat or overseat steering--what are the reletive merits? And what about hills? Living in WV, hills are a major concern. |
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#13 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 60
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Quote:
I haven't seen anyone say that they wish they didn't buy their bent. It's really a different and comfortable way to ride. Not to mention fast, fast, fast. And fun like a roller coaster too. I can't answer to your numbers 2 and 3 questions. I just don't have the experience to do so. I have to repeat though. I doubt you would ever end up wishing you didn't buy it. They also have a very high resale prices. Good luck and have fun. |
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#14 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 53
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Quote:
Blazingpedals norecumyet mite should be glad that Sebowyer lives on the other side of the pond.With all she does she mite just kick his butt.I wounder how he lost that much weight that fast and how long it will stay off.I know I have lost 20 pounds over the summer but the main thing I was after was to move it from my middle to where it was of some use.Between my two bikes and a trikke not a ( miss spelling ) I ride 125 to a 150 miles a week. By the way I think I am getting my bent legs. Wink |
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#15 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 292
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Quote:
2. I count CLWB the same as LWB. The advantages of LWB are: more frame to hang stuff from, longer wheelbase makes for a more compliant ride, also often allows the seat to be lower. Fairings tend to be less expensive due to simpler mounting hardware. Low bottom bracket models are easier for beginners to start/stop. The advantages of SWB are: handles more like an upright, generally lighter, easier to transport and store. SWBs more often have high bottom brackets (pedals) for higher performance at the expense of a steeper learning curve. Those are generalizations, and exceptions abound. 3. USS is relatively unpopular for 2-wheelers because it is usually less aerodynamic and limits where you can hang computers and other dashboard stuff. Proponents are usually in one of two camps: either they have severe hand problems or they simply enjoy the alien factor of having something different. Onlookers often don't understand USS and think the bike is being steered by thought waves or something. OSS is much more standard and allows a normal dashboard with shifters and brake levers mounted in standard, easy-to-comprehend positions. Hills may be an issue. WV has some steepies, which is where recumbents DON'T shine. Since you can't stand and pedal when on a recumbent, steep hills require a low gear, and a low enough gear and speed may bring balance issues into play unless you're on a trike. |
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