BikeGary
Well-Known Member
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.
Hard bar pulling (while "sitting up") does improve my climbing ability. But only for short spurts. (50 ft?) It seems to work by giving my legs something to push against, my rigid body, vs my seat back. I use it only on short steep hills. Mostly my arms aren't up to the task for much longer distances.
I am still working on the "use your upper body in conjunction with your legs the way you do standing on a DF" technique. I don't have it down yet. I can sprint for short distances on the flat doing it but I find that I "wobble" from side to side and have trouble holding a straight line on a hill. This is a serious issue when I'm climbing in a bike lane on a 50mph road as I cannot afford to swerve into traffic, and there is a steep curb on the other side. So lots of side street practice and until then I spin (90 to 100 rpm) and use a combination of a stretch of pull only stokes and push mainly strokes with my legs when I am climbing on my commute.
The technique seems to be a combination, push, pull with the arms in time with the legs. It's not intuitive at all to get the rhythm in sync.
And yeah on my first ride on the commute I was about 20% slower. Now I am about on par with the DF. Weather and how I feel can make either bike slow on a particular day. "It's not about the bike, it's the rider...."