- Mar 18, 2009
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elapid said:OK then, if you want to hash it out again for all to see. Coyle concluded three facts (improved efficiency + weight loss = increased power-to-weight ratio), two of which are blatantly incorrect because both result from the use of a totally unrelated estimated racing weight in 1999 (weight loss and power-to-weight ratio). These may be minor errors to you, but when they dramatically effect the conclusions of the paper then they are major flaws to me and many others on this forum that respect scientific integrity. If Coyle can get this so wrong, then not many of us have faith in his efficiency measurements either.
And as I have said before:
1) you can't claim that Coyle's conclusion that Armstrong's power-to-mass increased in season as a result of weight loss is incorrect, because you don't know that Armstrong's self-reported body mass data are incorrect.
2) neither the gross nor the delta efficiency data have been shown to be in error - the only issue there is that Coyle calculated delta efficiency using a different, but nonetheless widely-accepted, method than described in the paper he cited.