1 Attachment(s)
Polar HRM software (SK? V?)
I do the same 9 mile hill ride over and over, and I have been trying to find a good way to measure improvement (or its opposite, but let's think positively here!: p )
Overall time on the ride is not that helpful, because the first 2 and last 2 miles are nothing but downhill, and sometimes I can really cruise, and sometimes there's traffic or construction. The middle 5 miles of the route is just a steady couple of climbs, but I always forget to hit the lap button at the beginning of the main climb and again at the end. I can mess around in the HRM software, selecting portions of the ride and looking at the pop-up selection info, to do a virtual lap measurement, but it is ultimately not very useful.
Recently I started paying attention to a summary statistic I hadn't really noticed before: Total time (and percent time) spent climbing, flat and descending. I never really got how useful this info could be on a repeated training route like this, since all the "work" for me happens on this ride in the climbing part,and that's the activity that is the best indicator of how my fitness might be improving. Also, nothing ever happens on the climb that would cause me to go slower than I could (traffic, etc.) - it's just just heat, and how pokey or strong I feel.
So what I haven't figured out yet is how Polar determines what is climbing and what is flat, because this route only has about 200 yards of actual "flat" road, so they must consider a range of grade percents as "flat".
Any other Polar users have any idea about this? Am I missing anything about how I should or shouldn't be using this data?
Here's a screen shot of one ride this week - the summary data I'm talking about is highlighted in yellow.
Attachment 3731