ratz
Wielder of the Rubber Mallet
Ok I'm going to open the winter keyboard racing season and encourage people to debate this topic and to keep it civil. Disagree, point, counter point. But be respectful of all points of view.
The V20 encourage a big gear and a slow cadence; you have to actively work to spin. Anyone that's ridden the bike know what I'm talking about.
So how does this apply to training, racing, riding and equipping the bike? I do not know so lets discuss it and see what we can learn. I'll go first.....
Traversing the interwebs the generally immutable facts that do not seem to get argued about (maybe just a little):
Training Cadence
I have noticed that I have to practice 8-12rpm higher on the trainer than what I want to do on the road with comfort. Example on the trainer I am well adapted to 105-110rpm when I am rested, when I am tired at my worst I am 86-92rpm. When I take that out on the road it on good day I do 92-94rpm and on bad days I’m around 78-84rpm. If I have to and I force myself to I can do 100rpm outdoors but it requires mental focus. I can change that by changing my training.
The short cranks help a-lot with making the spinning practical, having the right amount of leg travel and hip "throw" matters in the lying back position.
Applications to the Road and Racing
You need to test your gears on the road with no wind (or in Zwift on a flat section of road). If you want to ride at 22mph (26 mph for Larry) what cadence do you need to hit in each of your different gears to go that fast; and can you actually do it? and how does it feel? You can model this a gearing calculator but really you still have to try it on the road before your event. You do not want to be in a bunch pack with gearing with big gaps that (at speed the pack rides) forces you to pedal 79rpm and the next gear down forces 92rpm. That going to kill your energy.
Once a race starts you are likely looking at the speedometer, power meter, or nothing at all. Nobody races by staring at the cadence meter, that would be like racing cars by tachometer not speedometer. Cadence in the race will be a result of the speed you need to go and the gearing that allows you to go that fast; if your bike is not geared correctly your cadence will be higher or lower than you want or rather higher or lower than you trained yourself to ride.
Example applications:
On a flat course like Sebring I want a 53/42 on the front of the bike and an 11x23 on the back. That gives me really fine grain control over my cadence at Speed X. The 42x23 to get over that roller on the 11 mile loop when tired and for the climb away from the lake on the crap-tastic rough road. This combination is the gearing that gives me total control to hit the optimal cadence. While different people will want different rings almost everyone benefits from having the 11x23 or 11x25 tight packed cassettes.
On a climbing course with 10% grades, give me a 50/34 and a 12x28; I will sacrifice on the big rings to keep my gapping on the cassette tighter. While a 52/36 and 11x32 might give me more top end for going down hill, my cadence jumps will less granular. Both Gearings are efficient but the 50/34 + 12x28 is more economical. Some races you have no choice and you might have to run 50/34+11x36 or bigger; If that's the case you need to know that ahead of time. You need to go see how much your cadence changes each time you grab 1 gear, and have to maintain the same event specific target speed (assuming negligible wind). Then you need to actually TRAIN for that RANGE of cadences otherwise when you grab a gear you will either find yourself needing a cadence you cannot do; and you'll have to slow down, thus winding up going slower than your strength potential (you could give up 15 watts from a cadence problem).
This quandary is one reason the pros will use: 53/42, 53/39, 50/38, and 50/36 and tend to be exclusively 11x25 on the back for all but the steepest courses. They pick the front for the profile and the 11x25 give them as much cadence control as possible without having to think about it in terms of cadence. The problem is that is an expensive way to outfit a bike for different conditions. It also requires FD re-tuning which is more time consuming. The Cassette meanwhile is much cheaper than the rings and easier to change.
So pick your poison; study the cadence needed and train for what you need for your event; when possible, practical and affordable setup the bike so that you have the greatest odds to ride at the cadence you are most adapted to.
One of the more interesting benefits of Electronic shifting is you can load your FIT files into Di2Stats.com and figure out exactly what gears you actually used during a race. From there you can figure out how to tweak your gearing to give more of what you use most often for a given type of race. It also gives insight on cadences you need to train. If for a given event you used 53x11 1% of the time why was it on the bike for that event? What did you sacrifice for that %1 of the time?
The V20 encourage a big gear and a slow cadence; you have to actively work to spin. Anyone that's ridden the bike know what I'm talking about.
So how does this apply to training, racing, riding and equipping the bike? I do not know so lets discuss it and see what we can learn. I'll go first.....
Traversing the interwebs the generally immutable facts that do not seem to get argued about (maybe just a little):
- Self Selected Cadence is whatever you train it to be. Whatever you do the most often becomes self selecting. If you don’t train it; then it maps directly to your walking pace
- For a given cadence to be efficient you need to actually train at that cadence regularly. (adaptation)
- The longer the race the slower the cadence you usually pick (specificity)
- If racing and reacting to others in a pack; a higher cadence is advantageous (applicability)
- The greater the forces resisting the movement of the bike (wind and gravity) the more advantage swing to high cadence. Or in other words Low Cadence is more Efficient but it may not be more Economical (situational)
Training Cadence
I have noticed that I have to practice 8-12rpm higher on the trainer than what I want to do on the road with comfort. Example on the trainer I am well adapted to 105-110rpm when I am rested, when I am tired at my worst I am 86-92rpm. When I take that out on the road it on good day I do 92-94rpm and on bad days I’m around 78-84rpm. If I have to and I force myself to I can do 100rpm outdoors but it requires mental focus. I can change that by changing my training.
The short cranks help a-lot with making the spinning practical, having the right amount of leg travel and hip "throw" matters in the lying back position.
Applications to the Road and Racing
You need to test your gears on the road with no wind (or in Zwift on a flat section of road). If you want to ride at 22mph (26 mph for Larry) what cadence do you need to hit in each of your different gears to go that fast; and can you actually do it? and how does it feel? You can model this a gearing calculator but really you still have to try it on the road before your event. You do not want to be in a bunch pack with gearing with big gaps that (at speed the pack rides) forces you to pedal 79rpm and the next gear down forces 92rpm. That going to kill your energy.
Once a race starts you are likely looking at the speedometer, power meter, or nothing at all. Nobody races by staring at the cadence meter, that would be like racing cars by tachometer not speedometer. Cadence in the race will be a result of the speed you need to go and the gearing that allows you to go that fast; if your bike is not geared correctly your cadence will be higher or lower than you want or rather higher or lower than you trained yourself to ride.
Example applications:
On a flat course like Sebring I want a 53/42 on the front of the bike and an 11x23 on the back. That gives me really fine grain control over my cadence at Speed X. The 42x23 to get over that roller on the 11 mile loop when tired and for the climb away from the lake on the crap-tastic rough road. This combination is the gearing that gives me total control to hit the optimal cadence. While different people will want different rings almost everyone benefits from having the 11x23 or 11x25 tight packed cassettes.
On a climbing course with 10% grades, give me a 50/34 and a 12x28; I will sacrifice on the big rings to keep my gapping on the cassette tighter. While a 52/36 and 11x32 might give me more top end for going down hill, my cadence jumps will less granular. Both Gearings are efficient but the 50/34 + 12x28 is more economical. Some races you have no choice and you might have to run 50/34+11x36 or bigger; If that's the case you need to know that ahead of time. You need to go see how much your cadence changes each time you grab 1 gear, and have to maintain the same event specific target speed (assuming negligible wind). Then you need to actually TRAIN for that RANGE of cadences otherwise when you grab a gear you will either find yourself needing a cadence you cannot do; and you'll have to slow down, thus winding up going slower than your strength potential (you could give up 15 watts from a cadence problem).
This quandary is one reason the pros will use: 53/42, 53/39, 50/38, and 50/36 and tend to be exclusively 11x25 on the back for all but the steepest courses. They pick the front for the profile and the 11x25 give them as much cadence control as possible without having to think about it in terms of cadence. The problem is that is an expensive way to outfit a bike for different conditions. It also requires FD re-tuning which is more time consuming. The Cassette meanwhile is much cheaper than the rings and easier to change.
So pick your poison; study the cadence needed and train for what you need for your event; when possible, practical and affordable setup the bike so that you have the greatest odds to ride at the cadence you are most adapted to.
One of the more interesting benefits of Electronic shifting is you can load your FIT files into Di2Stats.com and figure out exactly what gears you actually used during a race. From there you can figure out how to tweak your gearing to give more of what you use most often for a given type of race. It also gives insight on cadences you need to train. If for a given event you used 53x11 1% of the time why was it on the bike for that event? What did you sacrifice for that %1 of the time?
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