Beware of PowerCranks



They are great in theory only. Not ony don't they work, but the crank
arms come off, making for a very DANGEROUS ride. You can try sending
them back several times, but they won't repair them correctly and
you'll get the same junk sent back. Stick with one-legged drills and
save yourself about a grand.
 
[email protected] wrote:
> They are great in theory only. Not ony don't they work, but the crank
> arms come off, making for a very DANGEROUS ride. You can try sending
> them back several times, but they won't repair them correctly and
> you'll get the same junk sent back. Stick with one-legged drills and
> save yourself about a grand.


A *grand*?!? Anyone that dumb deserves a little grief...
 
On May 25, 10:29 pm, "Bill Sornson" <[email protected]> wrote:
> [email protected] wrote:
>
> A *grand*?!? Anyone that dumb deserves a little grief...


Boy, I'll say. I've got an Ava stem I'd like to sell this guy. Only
500 bucks! Contact me offline.
 
On 26 May 2007 07:08:06 -0700, Eggs Ackley <[email protected]>
wrote:

>On May 25, 10:29 pm, "Bill Sornson" <[email protected]> wrote:
>> [email protected] wrote:
>>
>> A *grand*?!? Anyone that dumb deserves a little grief...

>
>Boy, I'll say. I've got an Ava stem I'd like to sell this guy. Only
>500 bucks! Contact me offline.
>



If you pair those PowerCranks with Sheldon Brown's PowerWheels you
will have a very, very fast bike!
 
"Eggs Ackley" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On May 25, 10:29 pm, "Bill Sornson" <[email protected]> wrote:
>> [email protected] wrote:
>>
>> A *grand*?!? Anyone that dumb deserves a little grief...

>
> Boy, I'll say. I've got an Ava stem I'd like to sell this guy. Only
> 500 bucks! Contact me offline.
>
>

I have some wonderful AVA rims I can sell. Built up well, you should get
maybe 200 miles before the spoke holes start to crack.
 
On May 26, 7:34 am, Fritz <[email protected]> wrote:

> If you pair those PowerCranks with Sheldon Brown's PowerWheels you
> will have a very, very fast bike!



That's "POWerwheels." Get it right.
 
So why are they coming off..??

On May 25, 8:47 pm, [email protected] wrote:
> They are great in theory only. Not ony don't they work, but the crank
> arms come off, making for a very DANGEROUS ride. You can try sending
> them back several times, but they won't repair them correctly and
> you'll get the same junk sent back. Stick with one-legged drills and
> save yourself about a grand.
 
I had the same experience with PowerCranks. This product is garbage.
 
In article <[email protected]>,
"[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:

> On May 27, 2:12 pm, Ride Faster <[email protected]> wrote:
> > I had the same experience with PowerCranks. This product is
> > garbage.

>
> It's really outrageous for them Powercrank to charge so much for a
> faulty design.


The proprietor of PowerCranks used to post here to rebut criticisms, but
I haven't seen anything from him for a while. Basically I suspect that
the price is high because (1) he promises that his product will make you
faster for which competitive people will pay lots of money and (2) his
business is small enough that he doesn't get much by way of economies of
scale to bring his production costs down.
 
On Mon, 28 May 2007 09:35:02 -0500, Tim McNamara
<[email protected]> wrote:

>In article <[email protected]>,
> "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> On May 27, 2:12 pm, Ride Faster <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > I had the same experience with PowerCranks. This product is
>> > garbage.

>>
>> It's really outrageous for them Powercrank to charge so much for a
>> faulty design.

>
>The proprietor of PowerCranks used to post here to rebut criticisms, but
>I haven't seen anything from him for a while. Basically I suspect that
>the price is high because (1) he promises that his product will make you
>faster for which competitive people will pay lots of money and (2) his
>business is small enough that he doesn't get much by way of economies of
>scale to bring his production costs down.


That is likely true.

Plus, the "design flaw" is specifically addressed in the instruction
manual. Maybe the O.P. didn't read it thoroughly - I didn't and had
my non-drive side crank arm come off during a ride early this spring.
Since I also lost the oversized crank bolt, I called the company to
order a new bolt and ask what was up. The owner personally returned
my call left on voice mail, and asked if I has used lock tite on the
bolt when I installed it. Uh, no, I replied (lock tite on a crank
bolt?). It's in the manual he replied: they do tend to vibrate off,
so we recommend blue lock tite (or similar non permanent thread
adhesive) . Plus, he also suggested this: remove the crank bolt
from your old cranks, which is used when the Powercrank is first
installed; this allows the Powercrank bolt a few extra turns for
tightness. So I followed those instructions and have had no further
issues.

About the product: the cranks ARE hugely expensive (the above
explanation makes sense to me), but they are uniquely beneficial in
terms of building leg strength and "muscle memory". You are moving
the mass of the bike and rider one leg at a time, so you must pedal in
the proverbial circle, and you must use muscles you don't normally use
to accomplish that feat. They are so hard on the legs that the first
time most people try them (I definitely recommend on a trainer), you
don't last more than 5 minutes before pain and fatigue ends your ride.
You slowly build up endurance and learn to equalize your leg speed and
timing so that you can pedal "normally", and then you can take them on
the road.

I found that spinning at higher cadences was more painful than big
gears at low cadence. Climbing a steep hill slowly hurt LESS than flat
tempo with a cadence above even 80 rpm (on these puppies, even a
molasses like 70 rpm is a ***** ). To be honest, now that the season
is in full swing I haven't been using them much, and that contradicts
the manual. It would take a long, painful effort to adjust to high
cadences. Maybe next year :)

Even with the curtailed training, there is no question that my pedal
stroke improved after many trainer miles over the winter and spring: I
can get the "feel" of a rounder stroke. And, no question that my
climbing was better early season as well.

So I'm keeping mine and will be interested to see how far I get on
them next season.

If anybody is interested in them and saving (a bit of) money, there
are always 3 or 4 for sale on e-bay. People seem to either really
like them or really hate them.
 
"Tim McNamara" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> In article <[email protected]>,
> "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> On May 27, 2:12 pm, Ride Faster <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > I had the same experience with PowerCranks. This product is
>> > garbage.

>>
>> It's really outrageous for them Powercrank to charge so much for a
>> faulty design.

>
> The proprietor of PowerCranks used to post here to rebut criticisms,
> but
> I haven't seen anything from him for a while. Basically I suspect
> that
> the price is high because (1) he promises that his product will make
> you
> faster for which competitive people will pay lots of money and (2) his
> business is small enough that he doesn't get much by way of economies
> of
> scale to bring his production costs down.


Frank Day. His last posts here were after a scientific study showed a
statistically significant 1.5% gross efficiency improvement. The experts
here still wouldn't buy it.

Phil H
 
On Sat, 2 Jun 2007 19:39:13 -0700, "Phil Holman"
<piholmanc@yourservice> wrote:

>
>"Tim McNamara" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> In article <[email protected]>,
>> "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> On May 27, 2:12 pm, Ride Faster <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> > I had the same experience with PowerCranks. This product is
>>> > garbage.
>>>
>>> It's really outrageous for them Powercrank to charge so much for a
>>> faulty design.

>>
>> The proprietor of PowerCranks used to post here to rebut criticisms,
>> but
>> I haven't seen anything from him for a while. Basically I suspect
>> that
>> the price is high because (1) he promises that his product will make
>> you
>> faster for which competitive people will pay lots of money and (2) his
>> business is small enough that he doesn't get much by way of economies
>> of
>> scale to bring his production costs down.

>
>Frank Day. His last posts here were after a scientific study showed a
>statistically significant 1.5% gross efficiency improvement. The experts
>here still wouldn't buy it.
>
>Phil H


Dear Phil,

No offense, but that sounds like 200 watts rising to 203 watts.

Cheers,

Carl Fogel
 
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Sat, 2 Jun 2007 19:39:13 -0700, "Phil Holman"
> <piholmanc@yourservice> wrote:
>
>>
>>"Tim McNamara" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>news:[email protected]...
>>> In article <[email protected]>,
>>> "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On May 27, 2:12 pm, Ride Faster <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>> > I had the same experience with PowerCranks. This product is
>>>> > garbage.
>>>>
>>>> It's really outrageous for them Powercrank to charge so much for a
>>>> faulty design.
>>>
>>> The proprietor of PowerCranks used to post here to rebut criticisms,
>>> but
>>> I haven't seen anything from him for a while. Basically I suspect
>>> that
>>> the price is high because (1) he promises that his product will make
>>> you
>>> faster for which competitive people will pay lots of money and (2)
>>> his
>>> business is small enough that he doesn't get much by way of
>>> economies
>>> of
>>> scale to bring his production costs down.

>>
>>Frank Day. His last posts here were after a scientific study showed a
>>statistically significant 1.5% gross efficiency improvement. The
>>experts
>>here still wouldn't buy it.
>>
>>Phil H

>
> Dear Phil,
>
> No offense, but that sounds like 200 watts rising to 203 watts.
>


Hi Carl,
Run the calculation again going from 23.5% to 25%
efficiency.

Phil H
 
On Sat, 2 Jun 2007 21:22:45 -0700, "Phil Holman"
<piholmanc@yourservice> wrote:

>
><[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> On Sat, 2 Jun 2007 19:39:13 -0700, "Phil Holman"
>> <piholmanc@yourservice> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>"Tim McNamara" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>>news:[email protected]...
>>>> In article <[email protected]>,
>>>> "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On May 27, 2:12 pm, Ride Faster <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>> > I had the same experience with PowerCranks. This product is
>>>>> > garbage.
>>>>>
>>>>> It's really outrageous for them Powercrank to charge so much for a
>>>>> faulty design.
>>>>
>>>> The proprietor of PowerCranks used to post here to rebut criticisms,
>>>> but
>>>> I haven't seen anything from him for a while. Basically I suspect
>>>> that
>>>> the price is high because (1) he promises that his product will make
>>>> you
>>>> faster for which competitive people will pay lots of money and (2)
>>>> his
>>>> business is small enough that he doesn't get much by way of
>>>> economies
>>>> of
>>>> scale to bring his production costs down.
>>>
>>>Frank Day. His last posts here were after a scientific study showed a
>>>statistically significant 1.5% gross efficiency improvement. The
>>>experts
>>>here still wouldn't buy it.
>>>
>>>Phil H

>>
>> Dear Phil,
>>
>> No offense, but that sounds like 200 watts rising to 203 watts.
>>

>
>Hi Carl,
> Run the calculation again going from 23.5% to 25%
>efficiency.
>
>Phil H


Dear Phil,

Ah, so it was a 6.4% difference.

As I recall, the theory was that the PowerCrank forced riders to use
muscles to raise each leg that normally weren't recruited because the
riders let their other leg do most of the work.

With more muscles involved, the theory went, things improved.

Am I right in thinking that there was an implied assumption that no
placebo effect encouraged the PowerCrank group to train harder with
their new toy for weeks than the other group, which used the same old
equipment?

That is, was there any consideration of whether the effect was due
mostly to independent crank arms or whether it was due to the crank
arms encouraging more training effort?

Cheers,

Carl Fogel
 
On Jun 3, 5:46 am, [email protected] wrote:
> On Sat, 2 Jun 2007 19:39:13 -0700, "Phil Holman"


> >Frank Day. His last posts here were after a scientific study showed a
> >statistically significant 1.5% gross efficiency improvement. The experts
> >here still wouldn't buy it.


> No offense, but that sounds like 200 watts rising to 203 watts.


Well, the difference was in gross efficiency, not in power. Frank Day
calls them PowerCranks, not EfficiencyCranks. Phil may know whether
there has been a published RCT that shows an increase in power.
 
On Sat, 02 Jun 2007 22:42:15 -0600, [email protected] wrote:

>Am I right in thinking that there was an implied assumption that no
>placebo effect encouraged the PowerCrank group to train harder with
>their new toy for weeks than the other group, which used the same old
>equipment?


I don't know, but no one who has just started using PowerCranks can
ride the same distance/time/speed on them as with normal cranks for at
least several months until they are used to them.
--
JT
****************************
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On Jun 3, 6:42 am, [email protected] wrote:

> Am I right in thinking that there was an implied assumption that no
> placebo effect encouraged the PowerCrank group to train harder with
> their new toy for weeks than the other group, which used the same old
> equipment?


In the study, in-lab training time was equal between the PowerCranks
and control group (1 hr per day, 3 days per week, 6 weeks of
training). I guess you have to assume that the subjects weren't
spending their unobserved free time doing extra workouts in an effort
to screw with the results.
 
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Jun 3, 5:46 am, [email protected] wrote:
>> On Sat, 2 Jun 2007 19:39:13 -0700, "Phil Holman"

>
>> >Frank Day. His last posts here were after a scientific study showed
>> >a
>> >statistically significant 1.5% gross efficiency improvement. The
>> >experts
>> >here still wouldn't buy it.

>
>> No offense, but that sounds like 200 watts rising to 203 watts.

>
> Well, the difference was in gross efficiency, not in power. Frank Day
> calls them PowerCranks, not EfficiencyCranks. Phil may know whether
> there has been a published RCT that shows an increase in power.
>


I just checked their website and found another study of trained cyclists
that showed a 15.6% increase in VO2max and an 11.6% icrease in max
power.

http://powercranks.com/assets/pdfs/CSEP_abstract_dixon_2006.pdf

A test of maximum sustainable aerobic output would be nice.

I see on their website they have several more top pros using them.

Phil H