Before I purchased my first bent, I dare guess that I read every meaningful thread on BROL related to bent climbing in general and CruzBikes in particular. All of them. The question at hand has been litigated over many hundreds of pages over there. I
believe the S30 V2 is probably the best short hill (under a mile), steep (8-12%) climbing bent out there followed by the V20. How many experienced Cruz owners claim that their bike doesn't climb? How many records have been smashed on a Cruz? Is there much to add?
QED.
For anyone who thinks the upper body plays no power producing role in climbing, watch these two videos and make the same statement. At least listen at 1:00 on the first video. Watch the elbow movement towards the obliques, especially Pantani. This is relevant because this motion is what
can be replicated on a Cruz. To me....it is obvious. Has anyone considered why cross country skiers or rowers have higher VO2 max than cyclists or swimmers, but this goes against the more limited assertion of faster 1 km climbs.
One needs to look back to circa 2010 when Jim proposed a "pharm-like protocol" with 20 Cruz vs 20 rear drive bents. The important point everyone misses? Jim was talking about a 1 km climb or about 3-5 minutes in duration for the average fit rider. This is a VO2 max effort, not a 5-20 second sprint and not a 40 km TT. These 3-5 minute efforts determine breakaways in racing and they often determine win or loss. They also very much determine overall time to distance on recreational rides in rolling terrain. The one BROL thread in particular devolved into idiosyncratic design of experiment particulars but in my opinion based upon many decades of bicycle riding and racing and having literally reviewed and approved many hundreds if not thousands of real scientific protocols and study reports, an advantage of 4-5% can be easily determined with statistical confidence with a much smaller sample size with riders acclimated to the techniques of both. A "real" scientific study is cost prohibitive but it is also unnecessary. Why a 5 minute hill? There is no truer test, is easy to control, and easy to execute many replicates (confidence intervals).
One would merely need a few competent recumbent riders to ride a V20 vs say a Carbent, CA3 or M5. The powertap wheels should be swapped to control.
Sugarloaf "mountain" north of Altoid Springs Florida would be the perfect venue if competent bent rider(s) were nearby. The kind who know not to start up in a 53x13 lest they fall over or to shift to the small ring on a slow 90 degree corner or who do not fall off all the time. One who doesn't pedal MBB with waggling arms 180 degrees out of phase.
Personally, I would do several days of testing. ABBA, BAAB, etc. Four hard efforts is about the limit for most riders. The following hypothetical set of results would show a statistical significance to my satisfaction. To those who would argue that the 4% V20 advantage is due to chain losses, I doubt the loses are more than 1% but it would be easy to measure. A very carefully calibrated PT and pedal PM would be required but most PMs vary by at least +/- 1%. This is why I would swap PT wheels from the V20 to the RWD bent to control this error. The best current "data" is from an rider who compares strava segments from one day to the next, which is worthless.
run these into your favorite stats package.
RWD bent: 300, 301, 305, 299, 302, 297, 295, 298 watts
V20: 310, 312, 315, 320, 309, 312, 315, 310 watts
I would predict much larger differences in power going to the V20, myself.
Nobody is going to do these studies. On the other hand, it seems that 99.9% don't need to.