body weight & bike performance correlation (Page 2)
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2012-06-14 1:47 PM in reply to: #4261879 |
Resident Curmudgeon 25290 The Road Back | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation Is that a typo at 170, 0% incline, should it be 21.9? Seems like that should be a linear relationship. 150lbs, 0% incline = 22.3 mph 160lbs, 0% incline = 22.1 mph 170lbs, 0% incline = 20.9 mph |
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2012-06-14 1:52 PM in reply to: #4261891 |
Master 1967 | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation TriSte - 2012-06-14 1:39 PM MUL98 - 2012-06-14 7:25 PM gsmacleod - 2012-06-14 1:14 PM Ah - so on a pure "I need to get up this hill and this hill only" basis, being lighter does help with climbing? Doesn't it follow then that over the course of say 112 miles, being fresher at the top of each climb - even if there is zero elevation gain over the whole course - will have cumulative benefit? For instance, won't you get off fresher for the run than if you were 10 lbs heavier?MUL98 - 2012-06-14 3:06 PM It appears you are saying that regardless of weight, descending allows for sufficent recovery. Why the obsession with weight then? Or does the nature of triathlon (as opposed to cycling) change this in some way? Triathlons are almost always on loop courses so the net elevation gain is zero. In cycling, there are often mountain top finishes where power:weight is going to be critical, especially up the final climb. Further, when one considers the grades in a hilly grand tour, good climbers will have a chance to put enough time into the pack on the climb that the other athletes will not be able to make it up on the descent or the descent will be technical enough that the required braking to get down the mountain safely do not allow the athlete to make up the lost time. ShaneYes you would be fresher if you went the same speed up the hill as your heavier comparitive competitor, but then your buddy would use less energy getting down the hill at the same speed, so you'd be equally wiped when you reach the bottom. If you were to go up and down the hill at the same effort you would both be equally tired at top and bottom but the heavier guy would be behind you at the top and caught up at the bottom. I get this, and was working on the assumption that the lighter me makes climbing speed gains while still exerting less effort than heavier me. (Again based strictly on personal experience.) While your point about heavier equaling faster descents is a good one, given my handling skills I don't see any real gains there for the heavier me. Particularly on a course with technical descents. This topic is really interesting. Thanks to all who have contributed. |
2012-06-14 2:00 PM in reply to: #4261592 |
Elite 3498 Laguna Beach | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation I'm a lot heavier (read: fatter) than I'd like to be over these past three years but am luckily trending back to optimal now. I'm 5'9" and 170 lbs. My best racing weight is (was?) 140 lbs. I notice a difference in performance on the bike, most significantly in acceleration and climbing. I can't climb right now, partially due to weight, partially due to fitness. Obviously both play a role. As I drop weight my run speed at the same heart rate improves. 9:00 per mile at 150 BPM, 8:30 at 150BPM... 8:00 per mile at 150 BPM... It keeps coming down. Also, my top end goes up. I can hold a much higher (170 BPM + average) heart rate longer (20:00 during a 50:00 run) at a very high rate (for me) of about 7:45, even 7:30-7:45. For a 50 year old stroke survivor with a cardiac implant, that is OK. Bottom line: lighter is faster. It is. Any time you open the can of worms of body weight and composition people are... very sensitive. Feelings can get hurt pretty easily and people are pretty defensive, often on each others' behalf. I understand. I also understand I was faster then I was 20-25 pounds lighter. Fact. I also understand that the fastest triathletes, cyclists and distance runners are a lot, a lot, leaner than most of us. And while that may not be a practical benchmark it is true. |
2012-06-14 2:09 PM in reply to: #4261907 |
Pro 5755 | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation the bear - 2012-06-14 2:47 PM Is that a typo at 170, 0% incline, should it be 21.9? Seems like that should be a linear relationship. 150lbs, 0% incline = 22.3 mph 160lbs, 0% incline = 22.1 mph 170lbs, 0% incline = 20.9 mph You are correct. I get a "C"in cut-and-paste |
2012-06-14 2:11 PM in reply to: #4261949 |
Chicago | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation BrianRunsPhilly - 2012-06-14 2:09 PM the bear - 2012-06-14 2:47 PM Is that a typo at 170, 0% incline, should it be 21.9? Seems like that should be a linear relationship. 150lbs, 0% incline = 22.3 mph 160lbs, 0% incline = 22.1 mph 170lbs, 0% incline = 20.9 mph You are correct. I get a "C"in cut-and-paste Yeah I was thinking...anyone out there sitting at 170 could become a whole different beast on the flats if they cut 10 pounds! |
2012-06-14 2:12 PM in reply to: #4261897 |
Resident Curmudgeon 25290 The Road Back | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation TriSte - 2012-06-14 1:42 PM That 1/2 mph is valid ony if you find a race with a steady 4% incline, start to finish. BrianRunsPhilly - 2012-06-14 7:34 PM Basically losing weight is a small advantage on the flats but a greater advantage on the hills. You can play with this calculator but for someone 5'10 @200 watts on a triathlon bike (CdA is calculated for you, I used all other defaults): 150lbs, 0% incline = 22.3 mph 160lbs, 0% incline = 22.1 mph 170lbs, 0% incline = 20.9 mph 150lbs, 2% incline = 16.2 mph 160lbs, 2% incline = 15.8 mph 170lbs, 2% incline = 15.4 mph 140lbs, 4% incline = 11.6 mph 150lbs, 4% incline = 11.1 mph 160lbs, 4% incline = 10.6 mph
~1/2mph? To me thats worth dropping the weight - damn back on the diet |
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2012-06-14 2:13 PM in reply to: #4261592 |
Regular 234 Chicago Area | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation I try to look at this from a practical standpoint that's easier to visualize. Maybe this is too extreme of an example, but let's say you put a human on a bicycle and didn't have them pedal. They just sit there dead weight and you push them along a flat surface. Now put a hippopotomus on that same bike and push it along the same flat surface. Will it be easier to push the human or the hippo? |
2012-06-14 2:17 PM in reply to: #4261917 |
Not a Coach 11473 Media, PA | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation MUL98 - 2012-06-14 2:52 PM I get this, and was working on the assumption that the lighter me makes climbing speed gains while still exerting less effort than heavier me. (Again based strictly on personal experience.) That's likely a valid observation aboput your personal experience, although it has more to do with your fitness in each state than your weight. Obviously, there may be some correlation to your being fitter at the same time you weigh less. Weight loss will likely lead to gains for a triathlete, but mostly on the run, nominally on the bike and negligibly in the water. Weight loss in conjunction with fitness gains, would be the combo most hope to achieve. |
2012-06-14 2:23 PM in reply to: #4261957 |
Not a Coach 11473 Media, PA | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation siberian - 2012-06-14 3:13 PM I try to look at this from a practical standpoint that's easier to visualize. Maybe this is too extreme of an example, but let's say you put a human on a bicycle and didn't have them pedal. They just sit there dead weight and you push them along a flat surface. Now put a hippopotomus on that same bike and push it along the same flat surface. Will it be easier to push the human or the hippo? You should do some tests. |
2012-06-14 2:23 PM in reply to: #4261831 |
Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation gsmacleod - 2012-06-14 8:14 AM MUL98 - 2012-06-14 3:06 PM It appears you are saying that regardless of weight, descending allows for sufficent recovery. Why the obsession with weight then? Or does the nature of triathlon (as opposed to cycling) change this in some way? Triathlons are almost always on loop courses so the net elevation gain is zero. In cycling, there are often mountain top finishes where power:weight is going to be critical, especially up the final climb. Further, when one considers the grades in a hilly grand tour, good climbers will have a chance to put enough time into the pack on the climb that the other athletes will not be able to make it up on the descent or the descent will be technical enough that the required braking to get down the mountain safely do not allow the athlete to make up the lost time. ShaneETA: regarding cycling races Furthermore, even if the net elevation change is zero, weight still plays a factor when one tries to win a hilly stage. What will happen is that during the first few climbs, the ligher riders will take it easy, and stay with the pack while the heavy riders are working harder to go the same speed. Then on the downhills, where the heavy riders have the advantage, the lighter riders will let the heavy riders lead out, but the lighter riders will be able to keep up because of the draft. Heavy riders don't get nearly as much draft benefit when climbing. This will go on for several climbs throughout the stage...all the while, the lighter riders are either working less, or equal to the heavier riders...and are thus fresher for the finish. That's why you see the peloton usually stays together until the last climb when the lighter riders take off. Not only do they have a weight advantage when climbing...but they are fresher. Heavier riders don't really have a way to play this game against the ligher riders, except for maybe the TTs because they can generate more power. But in most tours, there is far more time to be made on the climbs than ther is to be made during the TTs...therefore it's better to be lighter. ETA: in triathlon, because you can't draft, lighter riders don't get the drafting benefit on the flats and downhills that road racers get. Edited by tri808 2012-06-14 2:27 PM |
2012-06-14 2:39 PM in reply to: #4261954 |
Pro 5755 | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation the bear - 2012-06-14 3:12 PM TriSte - 2012-06-14 1:42 PM That 1/2 mph is valid ony if you find a race with a steady 4% incline, start to finish. BrianRunsPhilly - 2012-06-14 7:34 PM Basically losing weight is a small advantage on the flats but a greater advantage on the hills. You can play with this calculator but for someone 5'10 @200 watts on a triathlon bike (CdA is calculated for you, I used all other defaults): 150lbs, 0% incline = 22.3 mph 160lbs, 0% incline = 22.1 mph 170lbs, 0% incline = 20.9 mph 150lbs, 2% incline = 16.2 mph 160lbs, 2% incline = 15.8 mph 170lbs, 2% incline = 15.4 mph 140lbs, 4% incline = 11.6 mph 150lbs, 4% incline = 11.1 mph 160lbs, 4% incline = 10.6 mph
~1/2mph? To me thats worth dropping the weight - damn back on the diet And you hold wattage steady. In reality what I find it really means is that being light means you can power up the hills at a lower wattage than a big guy. Let's look at it a different way, and hope I don't typo again: Hold speed to 20mph. Watts required @150 lbs, 0% incline: 149 Watts required @160 lbs, 0% incline: 153 Watts required @170 lbs, 0% incline: 157 Watts required @150 lbs, 2% incline: 289 Watts required @160 lbs, 2% incline: 301 Watts required @170 lbs, 2% incline: 313 Watts required @150 lbs, 4% incline: 428 Watts required @160 lbs, 4% incline: 448 Watts required @170 lbs, 4% incline: 468 So the wattage difference is trivial on the flats, but to hold speed going up a 2% grade takes an extra 24 watts, and jumps to 40 watts up a 4% grade. This is why w/kg is important for the TdF, on a hilly course the differences are very significant.
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2012-06-14 3:54 PM in reply to: #4261592 |
Veteran 320 Littleton, CO | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation I dont know if its true or if it works but I am a lot faster 115 lbs lighter than when I had it on me ROFL |
2012-06-14 4:25 PM in reply to: #4261964 |
Champion 5781 Northridge, California | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation JohnnyKay - 2012-06-14 12:17 PM MUL98 - 2012-06-14 2:52 PM I get this, and was working on the assumption that the lighter me makes climbing speed gains while still exerting less effort than heavier me. (Again based strictly on personal experience.) That's likely a valid observation aboput your personal experience, although it has more to do with your fitness in each state than your weight. Obviously, there may be some correlation to your being fitter at the same time you weigh less. Weight loss will likely lead to gains for a triathlete, but mostly on the run, nominally on the bike and negligibly in the water. Weight loss in conjunction with fitness gains, would be the combo most hope to achieve. Those are really the key points, IMO. As a practical matter, though, as opposed to a matter of physics (and another poster already alluded to this), I think the extent to which gains on descents by heavier cyclists balance out gains on the climbs by lighter riders is probably being overstated (in this thread and elsewhere). Technical elements obviously affect speed on a climb less than they can on descents (esp. for inexperienced riders). Personally, I don't see heavier riders blowing by me on descents, ever. What I DO see is heavier riders who are also better/more powerful riders on better bikes blowing past me in the flats, a lot (which speaks to the point made here that power and aerodynamics trumps weight on the bike). |
2012-06-14 9:22 PM in reply to: #4261592 |
Colorado | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation On the bike, it'd help if there's a lot of climbing, otherwise it's mainly about power and aerodynamics. Running, though, the rule of thumb is that you can gain 2-3 sec per mile per pound (other things being equal). That's obviously quite significant--20 to 30 seconds per mile for the 10 lbs you're talking about. duder5189 - 2012-06-14 10:21 AM So in my head, if one were to drop 10 pounds overnight, he or she should automatically pick up some speed on the bike. You've simply got less mass to push around. This would seem to be especially true on inclines. I guess another way to look at it is, put on a 10-pound backpack or giant water bottle and you're going to slow down a certain amount. First...is this true? Second...anyone seen studies, articles or the actual science behind it? Is there any way we can say...if you weigh 200 pounds and drop 10 you will almost automatically gain X mph on the bike? I'm sure there are other mitigating factors that would not make that type of statement totally reliable, but I'm sure there's been some thought put into this and some conclusions drawn. I'm wondering that they are. Thanks. |
2012-06-14 9:34 PM in reply to: #4261639 |
Regular 988 Westfield, IN | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation duder5189 - 2012-06-14 12:41 PM ThomasGerlach ProTri - 2012-06-14 11:25 AM I think you are really going to be disappointed by the amount of speed you get with 10 pound reduction. I will dig are around as I have good comparison but really the sport is all about how many watts you can put out. No, I wouldn't be disappointed at all! If there's nothing to gain, then I don't need to lose the weight! It will help you significantly more on the run. On the bike a few lbs won't make a huge difference unless you are climbing large hills. I was 175-80 after the off season and I'm down to 165-170 now and I climb better but my TT times are fairly similar. I've taken a fair amount of time off my run though. And people spend TONS of money on lighter bike parts simply because they can. Buying things is easier than working hard and there are a lot of people that like to find an easy way out. Those 6oz of savings might save 2sec over 40k! |
2012-06-14 9:42 PM in reply to: #4261879 |
Pro 9391 Omaha, NE | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation BrianRunsPhilly - 2012-06-14 1:34 PM Basically losing weight is a small advantage on the flats but a greater advantage on the hills. You can play with this calculator but for someone 5'10 @200 watts on a triathlon bike (CdA is calculated for you, I used all other defaults): 150lbs, 0% incline = 22.3 mph 160lbs, 0% incline = 22.1 mph 170lbs, 0% incline = 20.9 mph 150lbs, 2% incline = 16.2 mph 160lbs, 2% incline = 15.8 mph 170lbs, 2% incline = 15.4 mph 140lbs, 4% incline = 11.6 mph 150lbs, 4% incline = 11.1 mph 160lbs, 4% incline = 10.6 mph
The other piece of the puzzle your missing is the decline's. Your speed goes up in a similar fashion with your weight on the declines. Gravity/physics at work. I personally don't feel it equals out in my experience because with an equal climb/decent distance I'm going to climb at 10mph for 5 minutes, but go 40mph for only 30 seconds or a minute on the other end. Without getting my toes out to count I don't think the math works out to even it out, but I could be wrong. Sounds like a good high school math problem for one of my kids. |
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2012-06-14 10:49 PM in reply to: #4262657 |
Master 2563 University Park, MD | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation tuwood - 2012-06-14 10:42 PM The other piece of the puzzle your missing is the decline's. Your speed goes up in a similar fashion with your weight on the declines. Gravity/physics at work. I personally don't feel it equals out in my experience because with an equal climb/decent distance I'm going to climb at 10mph for 5 minutes, but go 40mph for only 30 seconds or a minute on the other end. Without getting my toes out to count I don't think the math works out to even it out, but I could be wrong. Sounds like a good high school math problem for one of my kids. If bikecalculator.com is to be trusted, then the weight loss is definitely worthwhile on a hilly course. For a 200w rider, at 150 lbs or at 170 lbs: On 5% uphill: 38 seconds per mile benefit of being lighter Moral of this: if you're light: seek out hilly courses with long runs. If you're not light, then a nice flat Tristar event is best for you (100k bike, 10k run). |
2012-06-14 11:02 PM in reply to: #4261592 |
New user 90 Austin | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation This article says on average a rider will gain .1 mph for every 1 pound lost. http://www.coolbiking.com/blog/cycling/cycling-tips/how-to-achieve-your-ideal-cycling-weight/ That article is used as support for the previous article. I've noticed that since I've lost 20 pounds I don't get nearly as winded going up a climb and can spin a faster tempo on the flats in a bigger gear. IMHO there is no question that losing 10 pounds will make you a faster cyclist. If you could somehow have a clone of yourself in a race and the only thing different about one clone is that they are 10 pounds heavier, that 10 pound heavier clone is going to get beat by your lighter self. |
2012-06-15 12:10 AM in reply to: #4261592 |
Master 5557 , California | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation IMHO there is no question that losing 10 pounds will make you a faster cyclist. ... if you don't lose power at the same time. |
2012-06-15 5:49 AM in reply to: #4261592 |
Elite 3140 | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation The only thing that does not make sense is how increased body weight makes you faster on the downhills. Remembering vividly from my College Physics classes that All objects (with air resistance aside) fall at a rate of 9.8 m/sec...therefore if you drop a bowling ball or a marble at the same height at the exact same time (I did this in college physics lab to prove this law) they will reach the ground at the exact same time.....we forget air resistance because if you do it with a piece of paper the "sailing effect" will slow it down....so if you try it with most objects you will get the same result....i didn't believe it till I tried. Therefore, with that law of physics(forget the name of the law but maybe an engineer can help me out) both riders with the same stature, same bike, effort everything the same etc except for body weight should descend at the same rate......I could see that a heavier rider would create more friction on the road causing them to slow down fster but not speed up So if it is really true that a heavier rider goes faster on the downhills, something else must attribute for it than weight alone. But just my 2 cents...carry on...great thread |
2012-06-15 6:31 AM in reply to: #4262842 |
Master 2563 University Park, MD | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation FELTGood - 2012-06-15 6:49 AM we forget air resistance because if you do it with a piece of paper the "sailing effect" will slow it down....so if you try it with most objects you will get the same result.... I think this is the key point. It's the combination of the body mass and the air resistance that yields the *small* benefit of weight on the downhills. But that benefit is nothing compared to the benefit of being light on uphills and on the run. |
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2012-06-15 6:53 AM in reply to: #4262842 |
Regular 65 Tucson,AZ,USA,Earth,Orion Arm,Milky Way Galaxy | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation FELTGood - 2012-06-15 5:49 AM The only thing that does not make sense is how increased body weight makes you faster on the downhills. Remembering vividly from my College Physics classes that All objects (with air resistance aside) fall at a rate of 9.8 m/sec...therefore if you drop a bowling ball or a marble at the same height at the exact same time (I did this in college physics lab to prove this law) they will reach the ground at the exact same time.....we forget air resistance because if you do it with a piece of paper the "sailing effect" will slow it down....so if you try it with most objects you will get the same result....i didn't believe it till I tried. Therefore, with that law of physics(forget the name of the law but maybe an engineer can help me out) both riders with the same stature, same bike, effort everything the same etc except for body weight should descend at the same rate......I could see that a heavier rider would create more friction on the road causing them to slow down fster but not speed up So if it is really true that a heavier rider goes faster on the downhills, something else must attribute for it than weight alone. But just my 2 cents...carry on...great thread F=MA, basically. Simply, force equals mass times acceleration. When descending on bike, skis, whatever, you generate more force if you have an "enhanced" relationship with gravity, which allows you to more easily overcome frictional forces between you and the ground (with bike or skis as intermediary), and have more left over to overcome air resistance. Thus, better acceleration, and higher velocities achieved quicker, assuming the bigger person's aerodynamics are not so much worse that they compensate. Usually they're not. I could throw in some stuff with vectors, but I don't think that'd really help clarify. |
2012-06-15 8:00 AM in reply to: #4261592 |
Pro 5892 , New Hampshire | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation In my area, a 10lbs weight reduction would yield significant bike gains, but that's simply due to the hilly nature of pretty much every single tri I do... Majority of NH is not flat... If we're talking dropping 10lbs of excess body fat, then it would very likely make you faster on the flats as well. |
2012-06-15 8:25 AM in reply to: #4262751 |
Chicago | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation mikecdisi - 2012-06-14 11:02 PM This article says on average a rider will gain .1 mph for every 1 pound lost. http://www.coolbiking.com/blog/cycling/cycling-tips/how-to-achieve-your-ideal-cycling-weight/ That article is used as support for the previous article. Just wanted to quote these articles and recommend them for everyone...good stuff, thanks for posting. A full MPH for 10 lousy pounds that I should probably lose anyway, plus whatever that gets me on the run...seems damn worth it. Although, there is another thread going on on this board right now about competing in order to 'eat whatever you want' which is a theory I generally hold near and dear to my heart...so that will have to be compromised in order to get to where I should be, which is something I knew anyway. |
2012-06-15 8:28 AM in reply to: #4262842 |
Champion 9407 Montague Gold Mines, Nova Scotia | Subject: RE: body weight & bike performance correlation FELTGood - 2012-06-15 7:49 AM So if it is really true that a heavier rider goes faster on the downhills, something else must attribute for it than weight alone. It is true that a heavier rider goes faster downhill and it is due to weight (plus the inclusion of resistive forces that are excluded in general physics classes as they make things messy). There are three main resistive forces when cycling and they can be calculated as: Force due to rolling resistance = mass * gravity * Crr Force due to air drag = 1/2 * rho * CdA * v^2 Force due to gravitational potential change = mass * gravity * sin (angle) The first two always opposed motion while the third can act with or against the direction of motion. While climbing, the angle is positive and the rider needs to apply a force in order to move upwards while when descending, the angle is negative and the stored gravitational potential energy from climbing the hill will be used to accelerate the athlete back down the hill. As mentioned, the weight penalty for climbing is not gained back in descending and it is therefore a good idea to be as light as possible while still maintaining the highest W:kg; this will make you faster up a hill, likely reduce CdA and while a little slower downhill, the difference will be made up by the gains going up. However, there appears to be some confusion in the thread; when I state something like "weight is meaningless in a tri/TT" what I mean (and what I was responding to) was weight loss off the bike itself. With tri/TT bikes, the build tends to be heavier and athletes get hung up on the fact that my roadie is 15lbs and my tribike is 21lbs; I need to make it lighter. What they need to consider is that the added weight is there to build more aerodynamic shapes which leads to a reduction in CdA; small changes in CdA, due to the v^2 term, are much more significant than minor weight savings in terms of tri/TT speed. Shane |
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