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Power Data Estimates for the climbing stages

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roundabout said:
I checked the youtube video of that stage today and it confirmed my recollection that the start of the climb by the main group was missed by the coverage.

Makes me wonder how the climb was timed.

that is simples

you take the 290 meters that were not filmed from the start. you watch the videos of all the other years and see in what time they did it. for example, the breakaway this year did in 51 seconds.
now CSC in 2005 went full throttle, they went around 14 seconds faster.

there is always a 5 second margin of error which i assume. i always said it.

you can check it yourself if you're not a belieber :p
 
Yeah seems reasonable, except for the 14 seconds faster part. That would be 2+ minutes faster over the 3km at that rate Cummings probably did the climb in under 11 minutes.

Make that well under 11 minutes.

Edit 2: very roughly Cummings did the climb in about 10:30 at most this year. Pretty hard to believe that in a hypothetical race he would lose only 70 seconds in the last 2700 meters of the climb to the class of 2005.
 
Cummings did 10:20

And this is a 10 minutes effort. Losing a minute is a lot, it's not alpe d'huez
The peloton always does the first ramps of a climb launched, at very high speed. It was the same in paris-nice
You definitely can't extrapolate like you did, saying that if you lost 14 seconds in 300 meters then you will lose 3 minutes in the whole climb. It is wrong, sorry.
 
Re: Re:

roundabout said:
Scarponi said:
Gung Ho Gun said:
2005:3,1 km@10,0%---9:12---average speed 20.22 km/h(Armstrong-Basso-Ullrich-Evans)

Must have been very cleans :eek:

2005-2008 evans would be climbing far better than Quintana today and even Froome would have a hard time dislodging him imo

Evans climbed Plateau de Beille in 2007 30 seconds slower that Quintana and co this year.

*clean evans
 
When comparing recent climbing rates to those of the EPO days people seem to assume it is impossible for a 'clean' rider to match the EPO times, but surely there has been gains in other ways in recent years. E.g. Prolonged altitude training camps (which is basically a legal expensive way of replicating the effects of EPO), better training techniques, better nutrition , facilities etc. also are the bikes lighter now or has the 6.8kg limit been in place for a long time?
 
Re:

willbick said:
When comparing recent climbing rates to those of the EPO days people seem to assume it is impossible for a 'clean' rider to match the EPO times, but surely there has been gains in other ways in recent years. E.g. Prolonged altitude training camps (which is basically a legal expensive way of replicating the effects of EPO), better training techniques, better nutrition , facilities etc. also are the bikes lighter now or has the 6.8kg limit been in place for a long time?

:confused:
 
Re: Re:

Bronstein said:
willbick said:
When comparing recent climbing rates to those of the EPO days people seem to assume it is impossible for a 'clean' rider to match the EPO times, but surely there has been gains in other ways in recent years. E.g. Prolonged altitude training camps (which is basically a legal expensive way of replicating the effects of EPO), better training techniques, better nutrition , facilities etc. also are the bikes lighter now or has the 6.8kg limit been in place for a long time?

:confused:

Isnt that the point of altitude training? To increase red blood cell count
 
For reference:

Alpe%2Bd'Huez%2Bclimb%2Bspeeds.png


Alpe%2Bd'Huez%2Bclimb%2Bspeeds%2B2013%2Btop%2B5.png
 

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