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2009-07-13 9:21 AM

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Champion
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Montague Gold Mines, Nova Scotia
Subject: Bike Course Conduct

On Saturday I participated in a triathlon that involved 8x5km laps of a closed course and each lap had six ninety degree turns (four of which were back to back as you finished each lap) and one hairpin.  There were about 150 athletes who participated in the race and it started to rain shortly after the first wave started the ride.

During the ride I personally witnessed three crashes and know of at least five more crashes that occured during this race.  There are some key pointers that I would like to highlight when it comes to handling yourself on the bike course that can help to reduce these issues.

* Riding in the rain - there is a possibility that it will rain on race day so you should have some wet weather riding experience prior to race day

* Avoid painted lines - when they are wet these may as well be a sheet of ice

* The first few minutes of rain are the worst - like you learned with driver training, the first few minutes of rain bring oil, fuel, etc to the surface and it makes the road very slippery

* Braking effectiveness is reduced - when your rims are wet, you have significantly less stopping power

* Slow before turns - you want to adjust your speed accordingly before the turn as hitting the brakes in the midst of a turn in the rain is a good way to hit the ground

In addition to these wet weather tips, there are a few crashes that were a result of poor conduct on the course by athletes such as:

* Ride as far right as possible - it is your responsibility to ride as far right as is safe to do so unless you are passing

* Hold your line - sudden changes in direction of travel should be minimized

* Avoid passing in technical areas - if you are overtaking someone heading into a technical area, either pass before this area or wait until after

* Pass left - at no point should you be passing on the right hand side; regardless of how justified you feel in passing on the right, it is forbidden to do so

* Inside pedal is up on all turns - your inside pedal should be in the 12 o'clock position if you are not pedaling through the turn and your weight should be on the outside pedal

Ultimately, remember that it is your responsibility to ride safely, predictably and within the rules.  If this means that you have to adjust your speed, tactics, etc so that you keep yourself and other racers safe, then you need to keep that in mind.

Ride safe,

Shane



2009-07-13 9:46 AM
in reply to: #2280672

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Subject: RE: Bike Course Conduct
gsmacleod - 2009-07-13 10:21 AM


* Inside pedal is up on all turns - your inside pedal should be in the 12 o'clock position if you are not pedaling through the turn and your weight should be on the outside pedal



Just out of curiosity, have you seen people NOT do this?  I just tried to imagine what that would feel like, and almost fell out of my chair.

Anyway, thanks for this post!
2009-07-13 9:58 AM
in reply to: #2280672

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Subject: RE: Bike Course Conduct
gsmacleod - 2009-07-13 9:21 AM


* Ride as far right as possible - it is your responsibility to ride as far right as is safe to do so unless you are passing



Nice comprehensive post, but I'd be happy if everyone just took this one thing away. I was hoarse after a 15-mile bike yesterday from hollering at people to get over to the right. Especially bad if you're riding in the middle of the lane, someone is passing you, and someone else is passing him. I had to cross the center line (not solid, no oncoming traffic) twice on separate occasions.

2009-07-13 10:13 AM
in reply to: #2280814

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Subject: RE: Bike Course Conduct
the bear - 2009-07-13 10:58 AM
gsmacleod - 2009-07-13 9:21 AM


* Ride as far right as possible - it is your responsibility to ride as far right as is safe to do so unless you are passing


I'd be happy if everyone just took this one thing away. Especially bad if you're riding in the middle of the lane, someone is passing you, and someone else is passing him.




'xactly!!!!!!
2009-07-13 10:57 AM
in reply to: #2280814

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Subject: RE: Bike Course Conduct
the bear - 2009-07-13 8:58 AM
I was hoarse after a 15-mile bike yesterday from hollering at people to get over to the right.


I totally agree with you. I've determined that some inexperienced riders don't actually know what "the right" is. Good riders can put their tire six inches away from the right edge, hold that line effortlessly, and be perfectly comfortable with another rider to the left whose bars are just a few inches away. But I think others are uncomfortable, must be 2-3 feet inside the right edge but they still feel like they are riding "on the right".

Another issue is that I think it's pretty natural for an inexperienced rider to think based on their effort that they won't be passed. Cycling is strange in that you can be pushing at maximum effort and it seems like nobody could go faster until someone blows by you effortlessly. So I think that makes inexperienced riders tend to drift left not realizing there are faster riders approaching from behind.

Great OP, too. I've gone down hard in a race on wet roads and that was enough for me. If it's wet I'll push the straights just as hard as normal but on the curves, I'm going to be extremely cautious (and avoid painted lines like the plague). Race results aren't that important to me.
2009-07-13 11:05 AM
in reply to: #2281034

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Subject: RE: Bike Course Conduct
breckview - 2009-07-13 10:57 AM But I think others are uncomfortable, must be 2-3 feet inside the right edge but they still feel like they are riding "on the right".


2-3 feet I can live with. I saw MANY (maybe 20% of the field of 200) that were riding twice that or more.



2009-07-13 11:07 AM
in reply to: #2280672

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Subject: RE: Bike Course Conduct
Good post.  SHould be a sticky somewhere
2009-07-13 11:13 AM
in reply to: #2280672

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Subject: RE: Bike Course Conduct

At least you guys don't have people walking bikes through the good lines of technical sections.. talk about a pain in the butt. 

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