I was going to take the V20 out again today, at the last minute I changed my mind and decided to take the DF instead. There are several Strava segments on my favorite 30 mile loop that I use to gauge my level of fitness. These are mostly uphill segments, so I can ride them hard without hitting dangerously high speeds. Today I maxed out on one of them with an average of 420 watts and an average speed of 21 mph. This is probably the most power I've ever been able to sustain on that hill, yet my average speed was nowhere near what I've been able to reach on any of my recumbents. Just to show how ridiculously inefficient a DF is, compare today's result to yesterday's on the very same segment while riding the V20: average watts = 309 and average speed = 23 mph. So despite putting out 111 watts more on the DF, my average speed was still 2 mph slower.
My personal record, good enough for 9th place, was set back in May of 2017 on my M5 CHR. That time, an average power output of 314 watts was all it took to maintain an average speed of 26.5 mph. When you compare these numbers, it's clear that recumbents totally outclass diamond frames in terms of efficiency.
Comparing cadence is revealing because it helps to answer an obvious question: why am I able to generate so much more power on a DF than I can on any of my recumbents? Compare the average cadence listed by bike/recumbent on the same segment:
M5 CHR = 83 rpm
V20 = 79 rpm
Specialized Venge = 115 rpm
The cadence in each case was chosen simply by what felt most comfortable at the time, but spinning faster by 32-36 rpm on the DF gave me a considerable power boost. To get an idea of how much cadence affects power production, I looked up my KOM on another segment where I deliberately pedaled at the highest cadence I could sustain on a recumbent, which in that case turned out to be 101 rpm. That run resulted in an average power output of 491 watts for 1:02 minutes. Not all of that can be attributed to higher cadence alone, but certainly a good portion of it can.
I don't know why my legs feel so sluggish on a recumbent after thousands of miles, but if I could increase my cadence to match what I'm capable of on a DF, it may erase much of the power difference that I'm currently seeing.