Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman
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2014-11-12 9:12 AM |
3 | Subject: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman So, I just signed up for Ironman Florida 2015. I have done multiple sprints, and olympic distances, but this will be my first full Ironman. I am currently riding a slightly modified Cannondale CAAD 9, with tri bars, which I have had for a few years. With a new baby, our budget would be strained for me to purchase a tri bike, so I wanted to look at other possible options. The first option that I have considered is renting a tri bike. The cost isn't high, but my concern is that all of my training will be spent on my road bike. Will my legs be able to adjust to the new position on the tri bike? My other option is to just rent some wheels and possibly buy an aero helmet to get the most aero position for my road bike that I am currently using. Will this really make a difference? The last potential option, of course, would be to go out and purchase a tri bike. I wouldn't say it is completely out the question, especially since I have a whole year to make a decision, but I would definitely love some thoughts on any other options. |
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2014-11-12 9:17 AM in reply to: IronNewbie |
over a barrier | Subject: RE: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman I would not rent a bike for a race where I'm going to be in the saddle for 5.0 -6.5 hrs with little to no training on it. Assuming you pay for a fit on it, I would stil be more worried about shoulder/back fatigue than my legs. Another option, is look for a used Tri-frame and swap your group set over to the new frame. Add a different cockpit and be have a full season on the bike. |
2014-11-12 9:25 AM in reply to: IronNewbie |
Champion 7136 Knoxville area | Subject: RE: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman ride the CAAD |
2014-11-12 9:26 AM in reply to: running2far |
Elite 3779 Ontario | Subject: RE: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman I would also avoid renting a bike. The idea of renting wheels + helmet will certainly add some additional speed on the day. I know Florida was cold this year but if it were hot some people would prefer a non aero helmet so you have the additional cooling benefit. If you go with the above suggestion of a used frame and switching your gruppo keep in mind the cost of aero shifters, brakes, bars etc (assumign you don't keep the road bars). And ultimately, ask yourself if the additional 10-20min of riding is worth the cost for your first IM - this assumes you're already in a reasonble setup on your current aero extensions. |
2014-11-12 9:26 AM in reply to: IronNewbie |
Subject: RE: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman If you haven't spent dozens to hundred(s) of hours on a tri bike, don't use one for a long distance tri. Legs, hell, your back will cuss you for changing position on it for a 6 hour ride all at once. Ride what you got. The helmet will actually make a difference in time and will go with you to the new tri bike if you buy one. The wheelset might give you a couple minutes. |
2014-11-12 9:27 AM in reply to: Leegoocrap |
Expert 2192 Greenville, SC | Subject: RE: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman |
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2014-11-12 9:32 AM in reply to: running2far |
Champion 7547 Albuquerque, New Mexico | Subject: RE: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman Originally posted by running2far I would not rent a bike for a race where I'm going to be in the saddle for 5.0 -6.5 hrs with little to no training on it. Assuming you pay for a fit on it, I would stil be more worried about shoulder/back fatigue than my legs. Another option, is look for a used Tri-frame and swap your group set over to the new frame. Add a different cockpit and be have a full season on the bike. I agree, subtle changes in riding position will affect your neck, shoulders, and butt far more than your legs. You'lll also have to deal with the unfamiliarity of how the rented bike corners or behaves in wind (which is also true if you rent aero wheels).
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2014-11-12 9:41 AM in reply to: IronNewbie |
Not a Coach 11473 Media, PA | Subject: RE: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman Renting a bike that will put you in a different position for the IM would be a bad idea (your legs are the least of your issues--think back/neck). If the tri bike didn't put you in a different position, it wouldn't offer much benefit. So ride the bike you bring--be it your roadie or a new tri bike. Aero helmet & wheels will make you a little faster on race day. How much depends on a variety of factors. And then there is how much you care about being a few minutes faster on the bike. Maybe you 'care' enough to spend $100 on a helmet but not enough to rent or buy wheels. Maybe you care about saving every second you can and, so, are willing to do both. There's no 'right' answer. If budget is a real constraint, I would say stick with your current bike and do what you can to get as comfortably aero as possible on it position-wise. Then consider buying an aero helmet along with some good tires and latex tubes--relatively low cost ways to 'buy' speed with items you will already need. Maybe go so far as trying to find a decent used aero front wheel and get a cover for your rear wheel, but very optional and only if in your budget. Good luck & welcome to BT! |
2014-11-12 10:15 AM in reply to: JohnnyKay |
Expert 3126 Boise, ID | Subject: RE: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman Originally posted by JohnnyKay Renting a bike that will put you in a different position for the IM would be a bad idea (your legs are the least of your issues--think back/neck). If the tri bike didn't put you in a different position, it wouldn't offer much benefit. So ride the bike you bring--be it your roadie or a new tri bike. Aero helmet & wheels will make you a little faster on race day. How much depends on a variety of factors. And then there is how much you care about being a few minutes faster on the bike. Maybe you 'care' enough to spend $100 on a helmet but not enough to rent or buy wheels. Maybe you care about saving every second you can and, so, are willing to do both. There's no 'right' answer. If budget is a real constraint, I would say stick with your current bike and do what you can to get as comfortably aero as possible on it position-wise. Then consider buying an aero helmet along with some good tires and latex tubes--relatively low cost ways to 'buy' speed with items you will already need. Maybe go so far as trying to find a decent used aero front wheel and get a cover for your rear wheel, but very optional and only if in your budget. Good luck & welcome to BT! Agree with the other posters. Renting a TT bike really only makes sense when you already ride a TT bike and can't or don't want to ship your bike. Renting the same bike or a similar bike works in that situation. You will likely be in serious pain if you try to go from your roadie to a TT bike for your IM. Ride your bike, enjoy the race and don't worry about the 5 minutes a TT bike would save you. Heck, just decide to pee on yourself instead of stopping and you will make up that time and more! |
2014-11-12 10:30 AM in reply to: IronNewbie |
1300 | Subject: RE: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman I have a Cannondale 9 (I think 9 6 to be exact) with clip ons that I have been riding and racing for 5 years. Love it, can ride it for hours on the extensions and it's super comfortable and fairly quick. I have pretty much set it up myself so it may not be the most optimal set up but it's comfy. Bought a NP2 this year, had a 3 hour fit session which had me feeling good when I left. First ride and 30 mins in I couldn't stay on the extensions any more. It took me about 2 months of riding the tt bike before I felt confident enough to race it. At that point I still think I was faster on the cannondale. Plus with the road bike I was so used to it I feel like I can do almost anything on it, especially while on the extensions - drink, turn, eat for examples. Everyones a little diferent but as others have mentioned switching bikes at the last min without any time to get accustomed to it could be painful. |
2014-11-12 10:57 AM in reply to: JohnnyKay |
Extreme Veteran 1986 Cypress, TX | Subject: RE: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman Originally posted by JohnnyKay Renting a bike that will put you in a different position for the IM would be a bad idea (your legs are the least of your issues--think back/neck). If the tri bike didn't put you in a different position, it wouldn't offer much benefit. So ride the bike you bring--be it your roadie or a new tri bike. ^ This There was a similar question posed a few months ago: http://beginnertriathlete.com/discussion/forums/thread-view.asp?tid=521990&posts=24#M5040143 My comment on that thread... Riding 112 miles on a tri bike having never ridden a tri bike before is just ridiculous. She's going to spend 6-7 hours in an aero position that she's never been in and then expects to run 26 miles afterward. I'd be thoroughly impressed if she were to finish the bike let alone the race. Her neck, shoulders and lower back will be on fire. The flip side is that she will ride 90% of the ride up on the base bars which negates the entire reason for using a tri bike. Better off just using a road bike in that case. My advice... use your own bike or rent a ROAD bike. The nothing new on race day is generally for minor things. Using a new type of bike on race day takes "nothing new on race day" to a different level. |
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2014-11-13 4:09 PM in reply to: IronNewbie |
3 | Subject: RE: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman Great information. Thanks! It seems like the right thing to do is use the CAAD 9 if I am unable to purchase a tri-bike well in advance of the race. Thanks again for all of the advice! |
2014-11-13 4:37 PM in reply to: IronNewbie |
Sensei Sin City | Subject: RE: Thinking about renting a tri bike for my first Ironman Yeah, just to jump on the bandwagon here. I realized on one of my IM's I didn't spend enough time training on my TT bike because I did a lot of group training rides. I chose to do the IM on the road bike even though I had a perfectly good TT bike in the garage. I back hurts while I type this just THINKING about 6 hours on a TT bike without having spent most my time on if for about 4-5 months before the race. |
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