Power to weight ratio?
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![]() What is a good power to weight ratio on the bike? Do you use your max power or your average power? |
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Master![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() eyeofthetiger2007 - 2012-04-02 11:15 AM What is a good power to weight ratio on the bike? Do you use your max power or your average power? Training and Racing With A Power Meter has a couple pages with a table of rough watts/kg values for various rider levels, time spans, and male vs. female. |
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![]() spudone - 2012-04-02 8:20 AM eyeofthetiger2007 - 2012-04-02 11:15 AM What is a good power to weight ratio on the bike? Do you use your max power or your average power? Training and Racing With A Power Meter has a couple pages with a table of rough watts/kg values for various rider levels, time spans, and male vs. female. x2 I don't have a link to the chart, but it's basically your average power for different time spans. Specifically 5 seconds, 1 minute, 5 minutes, and 1 hour (or 95% of 20 minutes). Also keep in mind that power to weight ratio is most important when climbing. For flatter races (like triathlons) power and aerodynamic profile is most important. |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Watts per kilogram (w/kg) is the commonly used term in biking. Anything around 3.5 w/kg and above is considered decent. Professional tour riders generally have a 6+ w/kg ratio for one hour power (FTP). To put that into perspective, we're talking about a 150 pound rider having an FTP of 410 watts or greater. |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() A little off topic, but why is it Watts/kg and not Joules or newton meters per kg? Obviously this was a weak point in my education. |
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Master![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Av8rTx - 2012-04-02 12:17 PM A little off topic, but why is it Watts/kg and not Joules or newton meters per kg? Obviously this was a weak point in my education. Joule is a unit of work, n-m is torque, watts are power. They are all related but not the same. |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() spudone - 2012-04-02 2:23 PM Av8rTx - 2012-04-02 12:17 PM A little off topic, but why is it Watts/kg and not Joules or newton meters per kg? Obviously this was a weak point in my education. Joule is a unit of work, n-m is torque, watts are power. They are all related but not the same. I see, I guess I was thinking Watts was an imperial measurement and the others were metric-my ignorance shows through |
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Coach ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() spudone - 2012-04-02 1:23 PM Av8rTx - 2012-04-02 12:17 PM A little off topic, but why is it Watts/kg and not Joules or newton meters per kg? Obviously this was a weak point in my education. Joule is a unit of work, n-m is torque, watts are power. They are all related but not the same. This guy sounds smarter than me, but here's how I think of it: Joules represent the total work you do over the course of a ride. Watts produced are the instantaneous power you are producing. Watts can go up and down and the joules accumulate faster or slower over the course of a ride. The watts is a produce of Torque & cadence. While you don't NEED to know the differences (and I'm not 100% sure I've got them correct), having a vague idea can help you enjoy training with power a little bit more. |
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Master![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() The watts is a produce of Torque & cadence. And 1 watt = 1 joule per second. (also: the watt is used in the SI system, btw) |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() natethomas2000 - 2012-04-02 12:06 PM Watts per kilogram (w/kg) is the commonly used term in biking. Anything around 3.5 w/kg and above is considered decent. Professional tour riders generally have a 6+ w/kg ratio for one hour power (FTP). To put that into perspective, we're talking about a 150 pound rider having an FTP of 410 watts or greater. Chart is here |
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![]() I really like this page... http://americanroadcycling.org/TheBook/PowerToWeightCalculator.aspx |
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Pro ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() ... or in my case, kg/W |
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![]() | ![]() Fastyellow - 2012-04-02 5:35 PM natethomas2000 - 2012-04-02 12:06 PM Watts per kilogram (w/kg) is the commonly used term in biking. Anything around 3.5 w/kg and above is considered decent. Professional tour riders generally have a 6+ w/kg ratio for one hour power (FTP). To put that into perspective, we're talking about a 150 pound rider having an FTP of 410 watts or greater. Chart is here I've never found that chart very accurate. Example this weekend, raced a Cat4/5 Crit and my 40 min power for the race was 3.6 w/kg and I got dropped in the last lap from the group. I think the chart understates the the 20 min portion. I haven't really paid to much attention further left on the power curve. |
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Expert ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() running2far - 2012-04-03 9:09 AM Fastyellow - 2012-04-02 5:35 PM I've never found that chart very accurate. Example this weekend, raced a Cat4/5 Crit and my 40 min power for the race was 3.6 w/kg and I got dropped in the last lap from the group. I think the chart understates the the 20 min portion. I haven't really paid to much attention further left on the power curve. natethomas2000 - 2012-04-02 12:06 PM Watts per kilogram (w/kg) is the commonly used term in biking. Anything around 3.5 w/kg and above is considered decent. Professional tour riders generally have a 6+ w/kg ratio for one hour power (FTP). To put that into perspective, we're talking about a 150 pound rider having an FTP of 410 watts or greater. Chart is here The other major factor to take into consideration here is strategy as well. The person who wins a Crit is not always the person who has the highest W/kg over a specific time. Better positioning may have given you a better result. That being said, everything should be taken with a grain of salt as JUST because you can produce 4.5 W/Kg does NOT mean that you ARE a CAT 3 racer. The best use of W/kg is in comparing your ability to another racer as we don't all weigh the same. I think "training and racing with a power meter" does an excellent job of explaining this, but basically someone who is 225 may be able to push 400 watts for an hour, but the same rider who is lighter can maintain the same speed at a lower wattage. |
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Master![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() running2far - 2012-04-03 7:09 AM Fastyellow - 2012-04-02 5:35 PM I've never found that chart very accurate. Example this weekend, raced a Cat4/5 Crit and my 40 min power for the race was 3.6 w/kg and I got dropped in the last lap from the group. I think the chart understates the the 20 min portion. I haven't really paid to much attention further left on the power curve. natethomas2000 - 2012-04-02 12:06 PM Watts per kilogram (w/kg) is the commonly used term in biking. Anything around 3.5 w/kg and above is considered decent. Professional tour riders generally have a 6+ w/kg ratio for one hour power (FTP). To put that into perspective, we're talking about a 150 pound rider having an FTP of 410 watts or greater. Chart is here I think the current edition of the book has different values in the chart from what is in that link. I'll check when I get home. |
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Master![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() spudone - 2012-04-03 11:19 AM running2far - 2012-04-03 7:09 AM Fastyellow - 2012-04-02 5:35 PM I've never found that chart very accurate. Example this weekend, raced a Cat4/5 Crit and my 40 min power for the race was 3.6 w/kg and I got dropped in the last lap from the group. I think the chart understates the the 20 min portion. I haven't really paid to much attention further left on the power curve. natethomas2000 - 2012-04-02 12:06 PM Watts per kilogram (w/kg) is the commonly used term in biking. Anything around 3.5 w/kg and above is considered decent. Professional tour riders generally have a 6+ w/kg ratio for one hour power (FTP). To put that into perspective, we're talking about a 150 pound rider having an FTP of 410 watts or greater. Chart is here I think the current edition of the book has different values in the chart from what is in that link. I'll check when I get home. Yes, it does. In addition to the right most column being more optimistic for what level you are at a given power/weight, it's for 20 min. I just bumped up near two Cat levels from that. |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() running2far - 2012-04-03 9:09 AM Fastyellow - 2012-04-02 5:35 PM I've never found that chart very accurate. Example this weekend, raced a Cat4/5 Crit and my 40 min power for the race was 3.6 w/kg and I got dropped in the last lap from the group. I think the chart understates the the 20 min portion. I haven't really paid to much attention further left on the power curve. natethomas2000 - 2012-04-02 12:06 PM Watts per kilogram (w/kg) is the commonly used term in biking. Anything around 3.5 w/kg and above is considered decent. Professional tour riders generally have a 6+ w/kg ratio for one hour power (FTP). To put that into perspective, we're talking about a 150 pound rider having an FTP of 410 watts or greater. Chart is here The top end is also skewed. Undoped cyclsts don't max out at 6.6w/kg. It is much more in the line of 5.9 to 6.1 w/kg. Good article here. (You can spend hours reading on that site - sport geek heaven) |