Re: Power meters: is Quintana right that they should be bann
Winnats said:
Should we ban Rev counters in racing cars? And what would be the effect? (I'm not talking here about F1 since we know they would just engineer around the problem, but real racing cars)
Probably wouldn't significantly change the outcome of many races; it may change some races as occasionally a driver will be concentrating on his line and forget to listen to his ears and then blow the motor. Good drivers would still win.
Doubtful it would make the racing overall generally more exciting, unless you specifically think the sight of bits of con rod spitting out of the engine is exciting.
Personally I don't think that's a great analogy. I don't cycle with a power meter, and I'm fine. A rev counter gives you an indication of something that isn't part of you; an engine may blow with a Rev counter or without even making that much of a bad noise. I also wouldn't like to drive without a Rev counter, but that's because I'm not
feeling it, I don't literally sense something inside me.
That analogy also misses the point here. In a motor race, you drive flat out, and change gears. In a bike race, it's all about how to use your energy, and your body itself should realise when you go too fast or too slow depending on how you feel or what you know about yourself, not what a mini-computer on your bike knows about you.
Let's say there's a bike rider (without a power meter) that feels really good on a climb, and is going up faster than he would normally because he's feeling so good. In this scenario, he'd think about what's best for him depending on how he feels, not how many watts he is pushing.
Same scenario, but with a power meter. This time, he starts pushing hard, then he realises that the watts he is pushing are too high and slow down, to conserve energy. Having power meters ruins the suspense of it, the wondering of how much left you have in the tank. In other words, it removes so much of the skill that you should have as a bike rider.
And as DFA says rightly, the likes of Poels and co ride up a mountain not caring what other people do, just looking at their meter, knowing they're putting out 5.8 w/kg or whatever and keep doing that, because they know they can. Sure, a rider might know anyway, but that's not certain. The some of the best stages with most attacks are the ones that a power meter doesn't work on (I'm thinking Porto Sant'Elpidio 2013). And clearly, if both Nibali and Quintana(!) and Valverde when he's not being gagged by sponsors and money say it has an effect on aggressive racing, there must be
some sense in the argument. Even if you don't agree, then there is the argument that computers and stuff are turning bike races into a type of F1 races, where looking at numbers counts as much as skill.