Need bike help! (post first tri)
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Moderators: k9car363, alicefoeller | Reply |
2008-08-17 3:28 PM |
New user 1 | Subject: Need bike help! (post first tri) Just finished my first tri on Saturday! (hoping to write up a summary later) Finished 331 / 487 overall, 16/37 on the first timers group. Overall I was fairly pleased... except the bike. Finished 207th overall on the swim (11:35 for 600m), and 127th overall on the run (25:30 for a 5k). However my bike was 436th overall (43:16 for 11 miles). Average speed was 15.3 mph. This isn't too far off what I figured from training, and I wasn't really sure to expect. I have to be missing something in the bike technique / training / etc, I feel like I'm in decent shape, and there's no reason that I should be in the top 30 - 40% of athlethes for the swim & run, and in the bottom 10% in the bike. I didn't have any major issues, I didn't feel like I was horribly out of breath or out of shape for it, or that I was over-exerting myself... I just can't seem to maintain any sort of speed. I did have an issue with a calf cramp starting out, so the first 45 seconds (after transition mat) was me massaging my calf, but once I got going it held up fine. I started doing a lot more research this morning about it, mainly about trying to get into a higher cadence while riding, instead of more power on each revolution. I think I've definitely been going in too high a gear for training and the race so far. I've got a basic bike, it's not quite a mountain bike, but the tires are nowhere near the tiny little ones. Any basic tips to get started? I'm thinking about getting a simple bike computer, what features should I be looking for? I saw a few for $20 at Sports Authority. Any tips what I should change in my training? I've been doing 25-40 miles a week (3 workouts) for the past 7 weeks beforehand, building up to the end. Should I consider a big increase in that? Or just focus on technique and training to maintain a much higher speed over 10-12 mile workouts? I'm a little time-constrained in when I can bike, though I am free to toss a big ride in on the weekends if need be (done one 20 mile ride so far on a weekend). I'd like to do at least 1 more tri this year, and make a huge dent in that bike time! |
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2008-08-17 3:54 PM in reply to: #1608862 |
Resident Curmudgeon 25290 The Road Back | Subject: RE: Need bike help! (post first tri) thompsondn - 2008-08-17 3:28 PM Any tips what I should change in my training? I've been doing 25-40 miles a week (3 workouts) for the past 7 weeks beforehand, building up to the end. Should I consider a big increase in that? Yes. The Re: Cadence Re: Computer |
2008-08-17 5:20 PM in reply to: #1608862 |
Extreme Veteran 326 Zephyrhills, FL | Subject: RE: Need bike help! (post first tri) welcome to reality...i think most people that start out think they'll be hammering along at 20+ mph in no time, but the reality is that it takes time in the saddle and lots of muscle conditioning to get your bike times down and your speed up....dont worry about your bike split, everyone who isnt a cyclist coming into tri's has to start somewhere, just like you are...as bear said, get your mileage up and your splits will decrease with time...you may want to think about a bike trainer if you are having trouble finding time to ride, then you can ride at home whenever you want...good luck, hope this helped a little |
2008-08-17 5:52 PM in reply to: #1608862 |
Expert 938 Orange County, California | Subject: RE: Need bike help! (post first tri) Do you have knobby or smooth tires on your bike. Smooth tires will be a lot faster. Do you ride in sneakers on a flat pedal or bike shoes with clipless pedals. Bike shoes will be a lot faster. Even the flat pedal with the metal/ strap cage around your toe with sneakers would be faster than sneakers on a flat pedal, but not as fast as bike shoes in a clipless pedal. Mountain and hybrid bikes are just fine for sprint and Oly triathlons, but their gearing is not as fast as a road bike, even at the same cadence and effort. Many bike shops will carry a Cateye Astrale 8 bike computer for about 25 dollars, and it measures distance, cadence, speed , time while moving ( the clock stops if the wheel is not moving) average speed, fastest speed and total mileage for all your rides on that bike. Other brands are good too. Note: in general, the road bikes are faster, but less comfortable to ride. Same with tri bikes, they are faster, but less comfortable. |