Hi all
Had another session with the trainer today, and was being told that with a recumbent, different muscle groups are worked then on a conventional road bike. Specifically how on a recumbent, the hamstrings are worked differently due to the angle that the legs are extended. I tried to go into how the Silvio preserves from what I can tell, the same leg position as on a DF bike, you are just rotated around the back of wheel in a sitting position etc....
I had also thought that on a DF, the extension of your legs are controlled by the height of the seat and how this same adjustment is possible with the telescoping shaft on the Silvio. So on either setup, it is possible to have an "improper" hamstring extension.
Are others aware of this mechanical argument the trainer was talking about and does simply adjusting the front end on the Silvio address the problem in the same way adjusting the seat does on a DF bike?
Thanks
Harold
Had another session with the trainer today, and was being told that with a recumbent, different muscle groups are worked then on a conventional road bike. Specifically how on a recumbent, the hamstrings are worked differently due to the angle that the legs are extended. I tried to go into how the Silvio preserves from what I can tell, the same leg position as on a DF bike, you are just rotated around the back of wheel in a sitting position etc....
I had also thought that on a DF, the extension of your legs are controlled by the height of the seat and how this same adjustment is possible with the telescoping shaft on the Silvio. So on either setup, it is possible to have an "improper" hamstring extension.
Are others aware of this mechanical argument the trainer was talking about and does simply adjusting the front end on the Silvio address the problem in the same way adjusting the seat does on a DF bike?
Thanks
Harold