1987 | Jean-Francois Bernard | 90 (-5): 6.28 W/kg for 58:30 on Ventoux ITT
Just bumped over this thread.
This one really hit hard, realizing how fast time flies. One of those moments "yes, ofcourse I remember" your mind keeping telling you that was just maybe a couple of decades ago. I better keep getting tight on my bike!
A diligent attempt at comparison, which generally deserves high praise, I must say.
However, and now I have only read the OP and nothing else, so I don't know how subject have been dissected.
But small adjustments in the numbers in relation to small differences in assumptions do not necessarily give me the most valid result, if you completely omit several essential differences now and then.
- road surfaces. There is a difference between gravel and then perfectly freshly laid asphalt on climbs, where this has only been done in recent years because a modern day GT passes by. On own body old asphalt vs fresh high tech modern asphalt layer : Lac d'Emosson 1998 vs. 2019. Really bad asphalt with potholes at first attempt, while 2019 felt like a walkthrough for last k, even though 15kgs heavier me.
- in that relation: resistance in the form of rolling resistance for tires - and frictional resistance in bearings. I remember the latter as a completely different world, jumping from my 1994 MBK Columbus aluminum bike to a test ride on a 2014 Canyon bike with Ceramispeed frictionless bearings.
And then the chain. Again a completely different value. Could Coppi have climbed Sestriere in 1952 with the same 1999 Lance Hautacam invention of 115rpm whisk wire, which subsequently became standard, what was common with chopping style disappeared almost completely from the mid-00s and is never seen now. You can spin up to infinity today, without the mechanics giving you much resistance. I can do that on my current primary carbon bike, but not on my 1994 Colombus alu bike, here the resistance torque is clearly detected
- wind and weather are complex. Wind is not just wind. In a steady gale wind of 20m/s like for example. on my cycling holidays in Fuerteventura, you can nage yourself out of it gear-wise and find a peak. At home in fluctuating wind and pmseless gust, is like a snakebite every time, draining you of strength. Even within the same mountain range, it can be wildly different how these winds behave, shaped by the immediate surrounding terrain.
- or humid weather is not just humid weather. Huge difference in pressure and temperature and the extra resistance in terms of watts it gives.
And how much should you use as a correction factor, +3 or -2 per parameter. It becomes difficult. And with data from ancient times, a job for Dr. Watson.
I do not intend to discredit the work.
On the contrary.
It is the subject of a gigantic passion for cycling, and I love it to the bone.