I already did. You don't understand. It is more about the distribution of forces over time (over the stroke) and also over more muscle groups.
Let me try this. First, stop thinking of your bike like a nitro fueled drag car or 200 meter sprints. Think more in terms of FTP or under and the production of lactate and H+ ions that inhibit power output locally.
When performing work aerobically, spreading the forces out and operating amongst many muscle groups with each at optimal torque or force is more efficient and yields a higher aerobic output than concentrating the work on fewer muscle groups. You don't believe me. Fine. Explain why rowers have the highest VO2 max amongst all athletes....
It's perfectly obvious to anyone that spreading out the load across more muscle groups allows you to do more work. I used the example of twin cranksets to illustrate that point, remember? I'm not going to spend time to once again respond to claims that I never made. It is utterly pointless to devote more and more time to arguing over which conceptual model you or I or Balor think best represents what's taking place when wagging the handlebars while pedaling. We now have a fellow who has built exactly the setup I proposed over a year ago. You don't seem to have any objections to it, so I suggest we wait and see what his results are. I have no reason to suspect bias will skew his results, but that's something I cannot say about Jim's results. Even Jim concedes that.
What would be interesting is where in the pedal stroke is this torque applied on a V20 by an experience Cruz rider.
Yes, that's exactly what I said in one of my responses to Balor. While my own test showed no difference when wagging the bars, the fact is that this movement has to be carefully timed to coincide with the pedal strokes to work. I haven't yet acquired the experience to be sure I was performing the movements correctly, so I don't count my negative experience as a refutation to Jim's (and other's) claim. As I've said before, I don't have any predetermined beliefs as to whether or not it will work. My arguments have been directed against the alleged "proofs" for it, which I think are terribly flawed.
Would you believe my peak power increased from 737 to 929 watts just with my new crank? Of course not.
Correct. Nor would I expect you to simply accept my word when I make an extravagant claim. I adhere to the principle that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, and an unsupported claim is no evidence at all.
Your position that you make as much peak power as someone else standing as you sitting is a bit silly.
My goodness, you do have an amazing talent for misunderstanding. I never once said that I make as much power sitting as someone else does standing. What I said was that I made more power in a seated position than I could standing, whereas the other fellow made the more power standing than he could in a seated position.
Track is a different beast.
Oh? And why is that exactly? Why is it that Olympic sprinters perform best seated?
As far as your mechanical engineer racer friend, hearsay appeal to authority much?
I wasn't making an argument. I was merely reflecting on the fact almost no one thought that Jim's weighted string demonstration proved what he thought it did.
How would you explain why cruz bikes climb short steep hills so well?
I don't feel the need to explain something that I've never witnessed. I'm one of only two Cruzbike owners in my area now, so I've never seen any evidence that Cruzbikes climb short steep hills better than other bents. That certainly hasn't been my experience on the V20, but as I said earlier, I don't have the requisite technique yet to test it. There was another V20 rider named Blake who occasionally came on our group rides. It was his bike that got me interested in the V20, but I always climbed hills faster than he did on both my CA2 and M5, neither of which are known for being particularly good climbers. That comparison proves nothing however, because it could simply be due to different levels of fitness. Unfortunately Blake's V20 was destroyed in a car accident, and he now rides a trike. The only other Cruzbike rider I'm aware of is Ben Tomblin, but he lives far away so it's not likely we'll ever ride together. He's a seasoned racer, so I might just drop him a line and see where he stands on the subject of handlebar wagging.
I have read dozens and dozens of such accounts from riders who have many different bents. In fact, I have never heard the opposite.
Then you definitely need to talk to Kent Polk. He doesn't think much at all of Cruzbikes. According to him, Cruzbike's claim to having built a superior hill climber is easily refuted by what he's seen in races. I don't have his e-mail on the subject any longer, but I got the distinct impression that he thought the claim was a case of deliberate fraud.
Take that fast bent of yours and the V20 to that pimple of a hill, Sugarloaf. You'll be faster (eventually) on the V20 especially that short 12-13% pitch towards the top.
There is a much steeper hill that I stumbled across by accident. It's not nearly as long as Sugarloaf and definitely not as well known, but I think Strava lists its average slope as 17%. It was so steep that my front wheel actually lost traction, but I somehow managed to muscle my way to the top in the big gear. Next time I'll try to remember that the V20 also has a smaller ring! It would be the ideal hill to test the bar wagging theory on, assuming I could pedal smoothly enough to maintain traction.