- Apr 21, 2009
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FrankDay said:I am looking for some evidence that using a PM offers a benefit to the cyclist.
Well be a good boy and let us know when you do. Because none of us have.
As a measurement tool however...
FrankDay said:I am looking for some evidence that using a PM offers a benefit to the cyclist.
From my wife: That was the most boring thing I have ever heard. Worse than any statistics course I ever took.CoachFergie said:For those who like to better their knowledge of something before they challenge it...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZC8wTYlhR6Q
FrankDay said:As I have pointed out, there is little or no evidence the current model is useful if athletes are interested in improving their performance.
elapid said:it has been said so many times now that a PM is a measuring tool and the tool does not make you better, but how you use the tool can make you better. This doesn't seem to compute for you, but that's just another example of your lack of understanding.
FrankDay said:Sure it computes.
It does, but if he admits it, several months and hundred of pages of high quality trolling goes straight down the drainelapid said:Ah, no. It most obviously does not compute at all for you, Frank.
42x16ss said:It does, but if he admits it, several months and hundred of pages of high quality trolling goes straight down the drain
Really, To have a chance of understanding that webinar one would have had to taken at a minimum a college level statistics course, and some of that stuff was graduate level. While a lot of cyclists are geeks my guess is few of them have taken college level statistics, or if they have, most have forgotten a lot of what they were taught since they don't put this stuff to day to day use.Alex Simmons/RST said:Just glad I'm in the 2%
Although I suspect the subset is far bigger than that.
FrankDay said:Really, To have a chance of understanding that webinar one would have had to taken at a minimum a college level statistics course, and some of that stuff was graduate level. While a lot of cyclists are geeks my guess is few of them have taken college level statistics, or if they have, most have forgotten a lot of what they were taught since they don't put this stuff to day to day use.
Further, UTube and a Webinar doesn't seem like the best place to "prove" how smart you are. Wouldn't that be better done in an academic paper? Probably not if you are doing something proprietary and trying to make a buck.
I guess I shouldn't complain because the series was presented as "Teaching the New Science of Power training" and the first episode was devoted to the "science" of modeling.
Another thing that seems a bit wierd to me is Dr. Coggan essentially admitted that the current model they use isn't very good. (more on that next time per the schedule.)
Now, I don't care how accurate your power meter is, if you are putting that data into a model that isn't very good I am not sure what you expect to get out of it? But, there are 3 more episodes and they say they have come up with something better. Let's see what they got.
LOL. What the customer was reporting was a decrease in speed when he went back to regular cranks in anticipation of racing. He was still faster and more powerful than before he started on the old GC's but he was in a conundrum regarding what he should do for his upcoming race. Without a PM he would have gone back without any knowledge of this small deterioration. I made a couple of suggestions to him from either racing on his PC's (he has plenty of base to be able to do so without much of an issue) or, perhaps, going to slightly shorter cranks (5mm - so from 145 to 140) when he goes back to regular cranks because he is probably losing some power because he is getting "lazy" coming over the top when he goes back to regular cranks, or so I hypothesized. He will make the decision he feels most comfortable with.CoachFergie said:Hey, even if at the end of the day you just use a PM to test several people in a experimental group and a control to be able to say a group that used a gimmickcrank in a training period performed no better than the control then that will save you wasting time training with a gimmickcrank. I mean you yourself said one client went worse going from them onto normal cranks so using a gimmickcrank harmed his performance!
FrankDay said:LOL. What the customer was reporting was a decrease in speed when he went back to regular cranks in anticipation of racing.
Sigh. No, he was inadequately adapted such that going back to regular cranks for the race was going to harm his performance from his full potential.CoachFergie said:So use of a gimmicrank harmed his performance.
FrankDay said:going back to regular cranks for the race was going to harm his performance from his full potential.
So much for your assertion that 5 weeks or so of training is enough to completely adapt.
Sigh, No. Overall he was faster than if he had never been on them. Even though he would be faster racing on regular cranks than if he had never trained on PC's his testing showed that regular cranks would slow him from his full potential compared to if he were to race on PowerCranks. Without such testing done with a power meter the athlete would never have been able to discern this difference. Such testing comparing different set ups is a valuable use of a power meter, as I have already stated. Whether he can psychologically bring himself to race 112 miles on the PowerCranks (when he has never done so) is a different story.CoachFergie said:That is what I said, they harmed his performance.
FrankDay said:Your posts are off topic.
Ugh, the only people who are prevented from racing on PowerCranks are track cyclists where the rules require them to be able to pedal backwards and brake the bicycle. And, the issue isn't whether going back slows them down a little but whether the training improved them overall.CoachFergie said:You said an athlete went from using a gimmickcrank and went slower using normal cranks. Seeing the majority of cyclists can't race with gimmickcranks it would appear that training with a gimmickcrank harms performance.
This can be measured easily with a power meter.
Don't try and change the subject if you don't like where your own claim is leading us all!
FrankDay said:Ugh, the only people who are prevented from racing on PowerCranks are track cyclists where the rules require them to be able to pedal backwards and brake the bicycle. And, the issue isn't whether going back slows them down a little but whether the training improved them overall.
Your posts remain off topic.
FrankDay said:Dr. Coggan essentially admitted that the current model they use isn't very good.
And he's getting the argument to circulate again and again, ad nauseum, for as long as I can remember. That's pretty successful trolling in my book. At least there's been quite a few good articles in this tread amongst the clutter.CoachFergie said:High quality? It's pretty obvious what he is trying to do. Several years of lame and predictable trolling.
42x16ss said:And he's getting the argument to circulate again and again, ad nauseum, for as long as I can remember. That's pretty successful trolling in my book. At least there's been quite a few good articles in this tread amongst the clutter.
CoachFergie said:What do you expect when Franks biggest criticism of the "Science of the new WKO+" is it was too sciencey and bored his wife
No, I don't think so. You wrote this:acoggan said:You seem to be confused: I don't use the critical power model.
and, as I remember, part II of your Webinar is about "problems with the current model" so, I can read between the lines and I think it says that you know there are some substantial deficiencies with the current model use by training peaks, not just with the critical power model. We will see how much better the new one is. Those, of course, who drank the kool-aid on the old model will, of course, believe the new one is so much better than the last one which they thought was perfect. I will wait until I see what you have.Things have changed/will be changing so much that I suggested to Hunter that we just start from scratch and write an entirely new book.
FrankDay said:No, I don't think so. You wrote this:
and, as I remember, part II of your Webinar is about "problems with the current model" so, I can read between the lines and I think it says that you know there are some substantial deficiencies with the current model use by training peaks, not just with the critical power model. We will see how much better the new one is. Those, of course, who drank the kool-aid on the old model will, of course, believe the new one is so much better than the last one which they thought was perfect. I will wait until I see what you have.
One question I might ask is will the new model be able to know and predict the differences a rider might expect between riding in the "cycling" position and riding in their "aero" position?
 
		
		 
		
		 
		
		
 
				
		