ammattipyöräily @ammattipyoraily 3 Std.Red Rick said:Any numbers for todays Vuelta stage? Stage was weird, climb was weird, racing was weird, gaps were big. Really want to know some numbers
Mayomaniac said:ammattipyöräily @ammattipyoraily
#LV2015, Stage 9. MTF Alto de Puig Llorenca (3.86 km, 9.61 %)
"6.50 W/kg [DrF]" = 11 min 34 sec
Tom Dumoulin: 11 min 37 sec
According to the Chicken: VAM 1916 m/h
BrentonOfTheNorth said:6w/kg for an hour is equivalent to [??] for 10 minutes?
acoggan said:BrentonOfTheNorth said:6w/kg for an hour is equivalent to [??] for 10 minutes?
6.72 +/- 0.30 W/kg.
Mayomaniac said:ammattipyöräily @ammattipyoraily
#LV2015, Stage 11. Cortals d'Encamp (8.50 km, 8.91 %, 757 m)
Fabio Aru: 27 min 29 sec, 18.56 Kph, VAM 1653 m/h, 5.72 W/kg [DrF]
ammattipyöräily @ammattipyoraily 3
#LV2015, Stage 11. Mikel Landa climbed Cortals d'Encamp approx. as fast as Daniel Moreno and Joaquim Rodriguez
The climb is 8,7 km@ 9,2% in the roadbook, so maybe Aru's performance was even better.
Catwhoorg said:Ian Boswells Stage 11 data article
http://www.teamsky.com/teamsky/news/article/64932#2e5LacexvtlPk8Jf.97
Having ridden for four hours at an average of 284 watts, Boswell came to the final climb of the day, the Category 1 Alto Els Cortals d'Encamp. For 40 minutes his Normalized Power® was 339 watts while averaging 20.3km/h
earlier they said 90 Minute Power of 312 watts, or 4.58w/kg
So a simple estimate of the final climbs comes out at 339/312 * 4.58 = 4.98 w/Kg
I would have guessed the same, but apparently Landa set a great pace.Red Rick said:Numbers for today's final climb? I'm guessing they're pretty low?
webvan said:Nice pace indeed, what's strange is that so many guys were able to hang on for such a long time. I suppose it's because it was a fast steady pace. With a hard attack in the bottom, several groups would probably have paced themselves separately.
Ask Team SKY for Froome's pre - 2011 Vuelta numbers and you will have your answerRed Rick said:Does anyone have an idea what the W/kg of the gruppetto typically are?
Remember that Ferrari's formula don't take into account the drag or wind conditions. The watts/kg for these different climbs can mislead people in which the length of the climbs vary with each other. That's why you have the highest numbers for Stage 16.vedrafjord said:https://twitter.com/ammattipyoraily has some Vuelta numbers:
![]()
These are obviously interesting, but with the two caveats that:
* in stage 7 you have seven riders who finished together all getting the same watts/kg, which means their weight has been ignored, which is one of the things we're most interested in for e.g. Quintana vs Dumoulin
* short climbs e.g. stage 16 have higher watts as you'd expect, and multi mountain stages have lower watts for the final climb, which is all good when looking at individual climbs, but it means that the difficulty of the course is a big influence on what the 5 climb average is.
Escarabajo said:Remember that Ferrari's formula don't take into account the drag or wind conditions. The watts/kg for these different climbs can mislead people in which the length of the climbs vary with each other. That's why you have the highest numbers for Stage 16.vedrafjord said:https://twitter.com/ammattipyoraily has some Vuelta numbers:
![]()
These are obviously interesting, but with the two caveats that:
* in stage 7 you have seven riders who finished together all getting the same watts/kg, which means their weight has been ignored, which is one of the things we're most interested in for e.g. Quintana vs Dumoulin
* short climbs e.g. stage 16 have higher watts as you'd expect, and multi mountain stages have lower watts for the final climb, which is all good when looking at individual climbs, but it means that the difficulty of the course is a big influence on what the 5 climb average is.