- Feb 20, 2010
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Polish said:Show me a Euro Pro on TT bars before Lance....
And Obree isn't even wearing shoe covers. Gotta like those LeMond Team Z Carnacs, though.Libertine Seguros said:The most revolutionary ideas in TT in that era mostly came from this guy:
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lance beat ulrich,tyler mayo and even contador in a little bitty td, he is simp,y epic.D-Queued said:And Obree isn't even wearing shoe covers. Gotta like those LeMond Team Z Carnacs, though.
Lance's position (i.e. the hump) is not/was not very aero. I have worked with some of the wind tunnel team. This is fact based upon actual testing.
LeMond, on the other hand, is well known to have had very low drag numbers. That is genetics working for you.
One area where Lance did dominate his competitors was that his power output actually increased over the three weeks of the Tour while the output of all of his competitors actually decreased.
So, what was it that made him go fast again?
As for best TT ever, how about Indurain's 508 watt average for the hour record?
And Lance's best attempt at the hour was... oh yeah, smokescreen.
He wasn't even good enough to try.
Dave.
Race Radio said:Show me a Euro Pro riding in a Speedo.
Libertine Seguros said:The most revolutionary ideas in TT in that era mostly came from this guy:
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D-Queued said:Lance's position (i.e. the hump) is not/was not very aero. I have worked with some of the wind tunnel team. This is fact based upon actual testing.
LeMond, on the other hand, is well known to have had very low drag numbers. That is genetics working for you.
ricara said:Yep. You can see that he is doing everything he can to keep the air from heading straight into his hips. Very effective. He has a mild curve to his back. I assert that his performance would have been even better if he had flattened it out. But that requires a coach working with him that knows how that is accomplished and can also observe him while riding. I haven't read the book, but my understanding is that Obree was a loner and did everything himself.
forty four said:do any of you **** talking clowns currently race? you know who you are the bitter tards who thinks with peds they would not suck. trust me you would anyways both physically and mentally as you play the victim role regarding your failures. any tough guy **** talking posters in socal want to do a little fast ride im in poor fitness as its winter and i have been sick but i bet im better and faster anyways pm me. or get a ****ing life sorry *** mo fos who get there kicks knocking actual competitors.get the **** off the site this is for fans of bike racing
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ricara said:Yep. You can see that he is doing everything he can to keep the air from heading straight into his hips. Very effective. He has a mild curve to his back. I assert that his performance would have been even better if he had flattened it out. But that requires a coach working with him that knows how that is accomplished and can also observe him while riding. I haven't read the book, but my understanding is that Obree was a loner and did everything himself.
sniper said:So how exactly is he gonna flatten his back any more than he already does? Looks pretty darn flat to me.
forty four said:do any of you **** talking clowns currently race? you know who you are the bitter tards who thinks with peds they would not suck. trust me you would anyways both physically and mentally as you play the victim role regarding your failures. any tough guy **** talking posters in socal want to do a little fast ride im in poor fitness as its winter and i have been sick but i bet im better and faster anyways pm me. or get a ****ing life sorry *** mo fos who get there kicks knocking actual competitors.get the **** off the site this is for fans of bike racing
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Race Radio said:Put down the glass and walk away from the computer....
forty four said:do any of you **** talking clowns currently race? you know who you are the bitter tards who thinks with peds they would not suck. trust me you would anyways both physically and mentally as you play the victim role regarding your failures. any tough guy **** talking posters in socal want to do a little fast ride im in poor fitness as its winter and i have been sick but i bet im better and faster anyways pm me. or get a ****ing life sorry *** mo fos who get there kicks knocking actual competitors.get the **** off the site this is for fans of bike racing
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Polish said:Copycat? Lance was the first of the Euro Pros to use aero bars.
Sure, we all know Greg used them in the 1989 Tour de France, some say unfairly...
But Lance was riding on aero bars legally in 1987. Before Greg.
Before any of the Euro Pros for that matter. Before Big Mig.
Yes, there were plenty of copycats.
That is the point of my OP lol.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HorLQHQ3pMc&feature=related
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red_flanders said:I saw at least 4 guys using TT bars in that video in the first 20 seconds.
WTF are you even talking about? The fact that triathletes (many) used them before they made their way into the pro peloton? Given. Obvious fact.
They called them "Tri-bars" at the time.
You have no point.
Scott SoCal said:Good:
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ricara said:It is pretty flat. For some reason I cannot embed images, only provide links. If you look at the links in my previous posts, all of those riders had flatter backs. The back is held straight by the muscles on each side of the spine. If the back is straight (including the juncture of the back to the pelvis -- very important), then the entire upper body rotates around the hip joints as you lean forward.
One big reason that people don't do this is because the saddle is not shaped correctly. The worst offender was the Selle Italia Concor saddle with the tipped-up nose, do you remember those? The saddle angle is also critical. (It also helps to be able to put up with numb genitalia as the blood flow is impeded at extreme forward rotations -- maybe this is no longer an issue with the cutaway "ergo" saddles.)
But the biggest trick is training people to ride with their backs straight. In my experience it requires a few months of dedicated riding. After that, a life-long habit is established. Then whether you are on a training ride on the tops of your bars or a solo breakaway in your drops or a time trial with aero bars, the flat back will keep your chest "opened up" for maximum breathing, and the rest of your organs operating efficiently and not cramped up.
I'm no Greg LeMond, but when I figured this stuff out my riding overall improved significantly. I was a skinny "mountain goat", but all of a sudden I became competitive in time-trials, too. There's certainly no drawbacks, except for a few calories burned by your back muscles.
