Basically it’s perceived effort. I don’t ride with a power meter at this time, but I am able to gauge my perceived effort fairly accurately. So what I’m saying is when I put out the same perceived effort on the Cruzbike as on the DF, my heart rate is 5-10 beats lower.
Yea. And power is lower as well, I bet. I did experiments going by 'perceived power' and varying seat recline/BB height in other thread (here is
summary, actual data on previous pages).
The sad truth 'why
*most* bents cannot climb' is a long combination of factors that add up (sometimes to obscene amount, like me basically being
2x slower during my first year of 'recumbentdom').
Not everyone is THAT much affected, and some (sometimes complete) adaptation is possible, but the higher bb/lower recline you get, the more power it will likely cost you, and aerodynamics is not always there to help you, and besides, unlike velomobiles/streamliners, most bents are not *that* much more aerodynamic than modern aero road bikes, and best unstreamlined TT bikes are about equal to best unstreamlined bents with exception of lowracers, perhaps.
More than that, sometimes quest for best performance with high BB costs you more than power and speed - but comfort as well. My only 400k brevet on a bent was, frankly, torturous with very numb feet and recumbutt galore (seat woes are not limited to DFs) that lasted for 27 hours and was much harder mentally than 600k brevet on DF.
My advice - try learning (and make sure you have a power meter to back up your feelings) handlebar waggling technique. Since your arms should be better perfused than your legs, (while I'm not sure at all you can add
much power this way) it might be totally worth it, if you don't have a full set of bent legs yet. Lowering BB might help as well, but it will cost you aero.
Hard interval training worked for Ed, and I presume that going midfoot (minimising passive oxygen consumption/lactic acid generation by your calves) + oval rings should help because they improve economy.
I also suspect that hard bar pulling might work for hard efforts as well - not because it generates work (it does not), but because being isometric effort it considerably rises your blood pressure, which might compensate drop in blood pressure in your legs due to recumbent position.