logistical fallacies??? I will put the little pea brain on it.CoachFergie said:If a tree falls in the woods does anyone hear it?
Any other logistical fallacies for us Frank?
logistical fallacies??? I will put the little pea brain on it.CoachFergie said:If a tree falls in the woods does anyone hear it?
Any other logistical fallacies for us Frank?
sciguy said:Many of the cycling improvements we might wish to quantify such as how aero a particular position is or a particular aero helmet is are incredibly small and difficult to tease out during real world testing unless we have some pretty darn accurate equipment. I'm sure you wouldn't want a pharmacist dispensing potent medicines to use a scale with resolution to the nearest ounce.
If the position derived by a particular triathlete riding 145mm cranks instead of 170mm cranks decreases the power required to pedal at 25mph by 2 watts, the only way we will know is by testing with an accurate enough measuring device. The same holds true for seeing physiological improvements as well.
Hugh
CoachFergie said:If a tree falls in the woods does anyone hear it?
Any other logistical fallacies for us Frank?
function said:for physiological improvements, I don't see how being more accurate would help from existing PMs taking into consideration day to day variations from hydration, glycogen stores, motivation etc etc
Tapeworm said:I'm still trying to work out who, aside from sports scientists, would want a crank that measures independent leg power.
What's the benefit or point?
Well, it could be of benefit to medical rehab specialists in documenting specific weakness and improvement, for one.Tapeworm said:I'm still trying to work out who, aside from sports scientists, would want a crank that measures independent leg power.
What's the benefit or point?
CoachFergie said:The role of the power meter isn't to measure hydration, glycogen or motivation. It's to measure power. If power is down from day to day then it's an indicator you need to check hydration, glycogen stores or question motivation.
FrankDay said:One of the first things I am going to do is put them on the Velotron to compare accuracy (should measure a little higher as measuring before chain losses) and to be able to compare output to spinscan. If things look good I will probably post that data for everyone to see. (If things don't look good I will probably contact the developers with a "these are not ready for prime time yet" message -
A
It is hard to say. I set the Velotron on ergometer mode (keeps a steady power) and it seemed I was getting about 25 watts higher on these cranks (didn't realize I could smooth that also so it hopped around a bit). I was lucky I could make it work at all as the cranks require magnets on the bike to "wake them up" and the pickup on the drive side is inside the 62 tooth chain ring on the Velotron. Luckily, it seemed to work through the chain ring.sciguy said:Frank,
How does the data generated by using these match up with your Velotron numbers?
Hugh
Maurice,maurice said:So I sought to test this myself, after a fairly large 12 week base phase (april), it was time to get my clients in for some re-testing and see how the program is validated. so after a 20 hour week (mostly base) and a 2:45 longer trail run the night before, the very next day I tested myself at 185 cranks to see what I would produce. I had been using shorter cranks in for 4 weeks in feb but notice that power at certain HR's was too low, so from march to feb I was using 185's
The result was a 69 VO2 at 185 hr with 385 watts at peak, my rpm was low 70's. two days later I tested at 165's and my VO2 was 63 at 194 HR with the same peak wattage and spinning slightly higher at about 85 rpm.
So even though I was well rested on the 165 cranks (I own a velotron with varicrank) my peak power was unaffected but power at sub max load was greatly decreased with the shorter cranks. ER (ratio of fat to carb utilization, or O2 to Co2) was also much more efficient with the longer cranks at sub max HR.
FrankDay said:Maurice,
Thanks for your input. Your post addressed several issues and I have several thoughts on some of your other comments but I will address specifically your "test". It is not really clear to me what you did nor how you tried to control things. I believe that most people will probably test best on the crank length they are used to so I believe each length should be tested after a period of adaption to the length. So, you had a 12 week base phase, but on what crank length? And, what changes did you make to the bike fit as you changed the crank length, as that could affect your testing if the fit is substantially different?
Most new users who use them essentially exclusively for 6 months can still expect 2-3 mph speed improvements over what they can do now (which is about a 40% power improvement for most). Those who do not use them as we recommend (or if they are really really good now) will see smaller improvement than that.coapman said:What is your revised estimation of the percentage benefit to be got from the use of PC's, it was 40%, how can you distinguish between the advantage (if any) to be gained from the use of PC's and that from using a shorter PC type crank.
FrankDay said:Maurice,
Thanks for your input. Your post addressed several issues and I have several thoughts on some of your other comments but I will address specifically your "test". It is not really clear to me what you did nor how you tried to control things. I believe that most people will probably test best on the crank length they are used to so I believe each length should be tested after a period of adaption to the length. So, you had a 12 week base phase, but on what crank length? And, what changes did you make to the bike fit as you changed the crank length, as that could affect your testing if the fit is substantially different?
FrankDay said:Thanks for your input. Your post addressed several issues and I have several thoughts on some of your other comments but I will address specifically your "test". It is not really clear to me what you did nor how you tried to control things.
FrankDay said:Most new users who use them essentially exclusively for 6 months can still expect 2-3 mph speed improvements over what they can do now (which is about a 40% power improvement for most). Those who do not use them as we recommend (or if they are really really good now) will see smaller improvement than that.
Have I ever said that this improvement is due to the exclusive use of the cranks? No, all I say is that this is the improvement that out typical user sees. since most of these people are not TDF capable a certain amount of the improvement is probably due to just more time on the bicycle. Until one does a study comparing two equivalent groups for a period of 6-9 months it would not be possible to separate how much improvement is due to what. I believe at least half of the improvement that people see (and almost all of the running improvement they report) is due to the use of the PC's since even those who have stabilized see improvement, sometime substantial improvement, without any additional training time.Alex Simmons/RST said:So you still claim a 40% improvement in power output is exclusively due to the use of your cranks (compared to say, training on regular cranks)?
Well, we did that for one rider, in 13 months of exclusive use as he managed to improve his professionally tested VO2 max from 71.2 to 85.5 ml/kg.min, his ramped max power from 405 to 451W, and his FTP from 284 to 394W. (his improvement in 6 months was ONLY to 81.7 and 358 - hardly worth mentioning). His coach told him that he would be able to stay with the best for a single day. What set them apart was their ability to recover and do it day after day. You don't get that while holding a real job and being close to 40. It isn't self delusion. It is what people report seeing if they follow our advice. Of course, the only people who could possibly see such improvement are those who actually try. Few users of course actually bother to get tested in this way so all we have are reports of speed and/or power improvements.Let's put that into perspective for people. That level of improvement would take me from Cat 3 level to dragging Wiggins up the cols in the TdF. In just 6 months! wow. I thought perhaps you'd eased up on your level of self delusion, but I'm clearly mistaken.
I didn't. It is simply what people report to us again and again. Sometimes they see more, sometimes less, but 2-3 is the most frequent number. My presumption is that most riders are smart enough to know when they are faster, even considering all those variables you mentioned, just based upon their experience. Most of them are not stupid even though you seem to think they are.CoachFergie said:When you claim independent crank users typically ride 2-3mph faster how did you try to control for wind, temperature, training, road surfaces, riding in a bunch verses riding alone, gradient, motivation, diet and all the other variables that affect speed.
It is my opinion that the main benefit of shorter cranks is not power but what benefits one might achieve in aerodynamics (and, perhaps, endurance). If one is making the determination as to what is better based on power alone I think they are missing the big picture.maurice said:In terms of adaptation I spent about 4 weeks on the short cranks and did not notice much of an increase in power through that adaptation.
It sounds like you might be one of the few with an excellent aero position on longer cranks. It may be that there is zero benefit for you. However, for those who do not have an excellent aero position with their current crank length I think it behooves them to experiment with shorter cranks to see if this helps them to achieve a better, faster, position, without any or much loss in power.In terms of fit I am an "extender" so my inseam is 846mm and on my road bike I am at 775mm (.91 of inseam), for the short cranks when I was trying them I had a seat angle of about 80 degrees in the TT, for the 185's I had to move my seat up to 85 degrees. For the 185's I set my seat to 765mm and for the 165's I raised it to 785mm. So although the seat height is raised on the 165's it only translates to about 12 mm because the seat moves so far forward on the 185's. So aero is not an issue, I have a 160mm drop and my hip angle is still OK.
Test protocol was linear, in other words I started at 100 watts and go up by 15 watts per minute until you puke/die/stop etc. Some people advocate a staged protocol in other words you start at about 75-80% and move up in 3 minute stages. This is great for blood lactate testing as you need to stay at a certain level for three min in order for BL levels to normalize. I personally think that VO2 and Bl should be 2 separate tests with the Vo2/co2 data used for zones and energy management protocol and the BL data used more for threshold determination.
FrankDay said:It is my opinion that the main benefit of shorter cranks is not power but what benefits one might achieve in aerodynamics (and, perhaps, endurance). If one is making the determination as to what is better based on power alone I think they are missing the big picture.
It sounds like you might be one of the few with an excellent aero position on longer cranks. It may be that there is zero benefit for you. However, for those who do not have an excellent aero position with their current crank length I think it behooves them to experiment with shorter cranks to see if this helps them to achieve a better, faster, position, without any or much loss in power.
Thanks for the feedback.
FrankDay said:I believe at least half of the improvement that people see (and almost all of the running improvement they report) is due to the use of the PC's
Alex, Fergie, My delusions, it seems, are destined to continue. Vino's win today gives PowerCrankers 4 wins in the last 4 Olympic road races. You snooze you lose. LOLAlex Simmons/RST said:Thanks for confirming your delusions.
