Jeremy S
Dude
Interesting. In another thread Ratz said:After riding the Q-rings at OCP #2 for a couple of hundred miles, I thought the big ring/smaller cog combos still felt lumpy, so I rotated the outer ring to OCP #1 this afternoon. A half-hour test ride showed significant improvement: Not only was pedaling smoother, my cadence increased 5-7 rpm from previous runs on that route, and speed was up 0.5 mph.
Low numbers make the ring "Bigger", "Earlier" in the power stroke good for mashers and give more top end speed at cadences that rang 60-80rpm. This a more leverage position.
Big numbers make the ring "Bigger", "later" in the power stroke good for spinners. It gives you more acceleration of the pedal and uses said accelerated pedal momentum to sling shot the ring through the power phase of the ring. This is good for spinners and people that range 80-100 rpm pedaling.
Not sure how that description matches up with your experience. You went to a lower number and found it made you spin better. I might have thought the opposite from Ratz's description.Big numbers make the ring "Bigger", "later" in the power stroke good for spinners. It gives you more acceleration of the pedal and uses said accelerated pedal momentum to sling shot the ring through the power phase of the ring. This is good for spinners and people that range 80-100 rpm pedaling.
The other day I tried out new shoes with thicker soles. Normally I'm a masher and have trouble keeping my cadence up, but for that entire ride, I was spinning like a madman. I felt like a motor was attached to the pedals pulling my feet around. My guess is that the shoes changed my dead spot and therefore my OCP number, but I'm not sure which way. The next ride I went back to different shoes with thinner soles, and I was back to mashing again. I am planning to tinker with my Q rings to see if I can reproduce this based on the OCP number.