Subject:Spin off from Indoor trainer thread / question
This was my first year in tris and I loved the bike. Since I was just training to complete distances for my first OLY, I found that I became slow but very strong. I biked lots of steep hills and did lots of 1-2hr rides to prepare for the tri and attempt to lose weight.
At one point in my training, I read about cadence being important. I manually counted and determined that I had a low cadence (roughly 65-70) and lots of torque. I attempted to speed that up but it felt very strange and I decided not to make a radical change that close to my event. Now that I have lots of time to experiment, are there bike plans which are designed to develop/improve a person's cadence?
1. I ordered a Cat Eye and I do see some of the workouts on my current plan reference certain RPMs but I'm wondering what else there is to it? ie, are there cadence based workouts I can do?
2. Is a powermeter the only way to determine what RPMs are optimal for each person?
3. Is there a generic RPM range I should shoot for right now? I've seen everything from 85-120 so should I shoot for something in the middle?
Subject:RE: Spin off from Indoor trainer thread / question
Pector55 - 2009-10-16 8:28 AM
This was my first year in tris and I loved the bike. Since I was just training to complete distances for my first OLY, I found that I became slow but very strong. I biked lots of steep hills and did lots of 1-2hr rides to prepare for the tri and attempt to lose weight.
At one point in my training, I read about cadence being important. I manually counted and determined that I had a low cadence (roughly 65-70) and lots of torque. I attempted to speed that up but it felt very strange and I decided not to make a radical change that close to my event. Now that I have lots of time to experiment, are there bike plans which are designed to develop/improve a person's cadence?
1. I ordered a Cat Eye and I do see some of the workouts on my current plan reference certain RPMs but I'm wondering what else there is to it? ie, are there cadence based workouts I can do?
2. Is a powermeter the only way to determine what RPMs are optimal for each person?
3. Is there a generic RPM range I should shoot for right now? I've seen everything from 85-120 so should I shoot for something in the middle?
I would say acceptable is 75+. If you think your cadence is really as low as 65 on average I probably would monitor it and try to get it up to 75. I would not worry much beyond that. Your body has a way of selecting its naturally efficient cadence. There are fast/strong riders with high cadences and low cadences. I also don't think it makes one bit of difference in triathlon run legs either.