Subject: RE: What gear should I be in?The cadence suggestion is a good one...there are bike computers with cadence functions that aren't very expensive (I think Cateye has a very cheap hard-wired one...I have a Sigma wireless one that was only like $90 ). In general terms, keeping your cadence around 90rpm is a good starting point (at least for triathletes...it mirrors a pretty optimal running cadence )...shift your gearing until you can maintain something around that cadence comfortably. You may find that you were trying (unsuccessfully ) to push too big a gear--i.e., not maintaining a desirable cadence--or that you were at a good cadence, but just don't yet have the bike fitness to ride at that cadence in a gearing that more fit cyclists are able to. |