I don't know it either, you'd have to ask him. But I trust he knows what he's doing. Generally, when pros give him their data, his estimations prove to be spot on
LaFlorecita said:No, there was some (false) flat between the summit of the climb land the descent. The intermediate check was somewhere halfway through that (false) flat section.Taxus4a said:LaFlorecita said:I don't think ammattipyoraily uses the standard VAM formula. With the flat section at the top and the very steep gradients on the climb I don't think it would be very accurate.roundabout said:Red Rick said:So, he says the actual estimate would be 6.8?
Color me confused, but how does a VAM of 1831 m/h translate to 6.6 W/kg on a 8.96% average climb?
Using the standard VAM formula it's 6.3 something
No flat section at the top,the last Km is about 5 %. That valance the harder Kms of that side, so average is no very different to the normal side.
Taxus. It is the time until the intermediate point. The intermediate point. Not the time for the climb. The intermediate point was after some false flat.Taxus4a said:Yes, (that false flat, in downhill, is just 1,5 Km), but the data are stimated just for the climb,
ammattipyöräily @ammattipyoraily 9 abr.
#Itzulia, Stage 6 (ITT). intermediate time check at 6.6 km
1. Alberto Contador 16:58
6. Thibaut Pinot 17:59 (+1:01)
The climb was about 4,8 or so and about 15 minutes and something...
LaFlorecita said:Taxus. It is the time until the intermediate point. The intermediate point. Not the time for the climb. The intermediate point was after some false flat.Taxus4a said:Yes, (that false flat, in downhill, is just 1,5 Km), but the data are stimated just for the climb,
ammattipyöräily @ammattipyoraily 9 abr.
#Itzulia, Stage 6 (ITT). intermediate time check at 6.6 km
1. Alberto Contador 16:58
6. Thibaut Pinot 17:59 (+1:01)
The climb was about 4,8 or so and about 15 minutes and something...
![]()
6.6km. Look on this image. There is some false flat and even some downhill before the 6.6km mark. No big deal but it does change the estimations a bit. As ammattipyoraily says, add ~3%. He knows his stuff.
Yes, the time at the checkpoint minus the approximate time for the flat first 1-2 km. Which still means the false flat kms at the top are included.Taxus4a said:LaFlorecita said:Taxus. It is the time until the intermediate point. The intermediate point. Not the time for the climb. The intermediate point was after some false flat.Taxus4a said:Yes, (that false flat, in downhill, is just 1,5 Km), but the data are stimated just for the climb,
ammattipyöräily @ammattipyoraily 9 abr.
#Itzulia, Stage 6 (ITT). intermediate time check at 6.6 km
1. Alberto Contador 16:58
6. Thibaut Pinot 17:59 (+1:01)
The climb was about 4,8 or so and about 15 minutes and something...
![]()
6.6km. Look on this image. There is some false flat and even some downhill before the 6.6km mark. No big deal but it does change the estimations a bit. As ammattipyoraily says, add ~3%. He knows his stuff.
Yes, I put the time of the intermediate point, and as you see is different to the time of the top when the power data was calculated, who was around 15 minutes, no 17.
LaFlorecita said:Yes, the time at the checkpoint minus the approximate time for the flat first 1-2 km. Which still means the false flat kms at the top are included.Taxus4a said:LaFlorecita said:Taxus. It is the time until the intermediate point. The intermediate point. Not the time for the climb. The intermediate point was after some false flat.Taxus4a said:Yes, (that false flat, in downhill, is just 1,5 Km), but the data are stimated just for the climb,
ammattipyöräily @ammattipyoraily 9 abr.
#Itzulia, Stage 6 (ITT). intermediate time check at 6.6 km
1. Alberto Contador 16:58
6. Thibaut Pinot 17:59 (+1:01)
The climb was about 4,8 or so and about 15 minutes and something...
![]()
6.6km. Look on this image. There is some false flat and even some downhill before the 6.6km mark. No big deal but it does change the estimations a bit. As ammattipyoraily says, add ~3%. He knows his stuff.
Yes, I put the time of the intermediate point, and as you see is different to the time of the top when the power data was calculated, who was around 15 minutes, no 17.
What does Pantani have to do with it? He never even rode an ITT on Alpe. I could similarly claim that no technological advances have been made in cycling since 1998, since the fastest ascents of any climb were before '98Taxus4a said:Gung Ho Gun said:Actually they are:Taxus4a said:so that way better time in Alp huez is not the ITT
4. 2004: 37:36 Lance Armstrong 22.02 km/h
6. 2001: 38:03 Lance Armstrong 21.76 km/h
14. 2004: 38:40 Jan Ullrich 21.41 km/h
44. 2004: 39:58 Ivan Basso 20.72 km/h
48. 2001: 40:02 Jan Ullrich 20.68 km/h
Their 2003 times are not even in the top 100
More than 1/4 of the top 100 ascents are from 2004
The same happened with the Ventoux ITT from the Dauphine
1. 1995: 36:40 Marco Pantani 22.58 km/h
2. 1997: 36:53 Marco Pantani 22.45 km/h
3. 1994: 37:15 Marco Pantani 22.23 km/h
4. 2004: 37:36 Lance Armstrong 22.02 km/h
5. 1997: 37:40 Jan Ullrich 21.98 km/h
No, as I said the best times in alp Dhuezare no in ITT.
Red Rick said:Sooo. Cauberg ascent times?
Red Rick said:That's not the full climb. Also, what was the wind like yesterday? Looked to be cross/head wind on the final part at least