Okay, not a newbie to bikes, but a relative newbie to riding on roads (ie, places where cadence isn't constantly interrupted by obstacles).
I'm commuting on a road bike (easier to commute on a road bike than road bike on a commuter, I figure, and eventually I do plan to ride further than the 12 miles to work), and I have this new shiny toy that tells me my cadence.
So, picking a number out of my vague memory, I decided 80 was a "good" cadence, and this morning I worked on keeping my cadence between 75 and 85. This definitely resulted in a lot more shifting than I would have done otherwise =)
I guess my question is, if you're someone who pays attention to cadence at all, what is your target? Is everyone's target cadence pretty similar, or is it "okay" say for some people to target 60, some 100? Mostly I hear about people bringing their cadence up to 80 or 90 because most people, I guess, start out pushing too high a gear too slow -- is there a negative to going higher than your target?
All the hills on my commute are pretty short, and I found myself (this was a surprise) up to a cadence of 100-115. I'm not sure I could have maintained that on anything longer than a few hundred yards. Should I still have been forcing myself to upshift till a cadence of 80 felt right, or is it okay to burst your cadence on short hills? If I had done that on a longer hill, would I have been sabotaging the rest of the climb?
Your thoughts appreciated =)



Reply With Quote
You are much more likely to blow up on a longer climb having a low cadence, because your muscles may fatigue faster. However, you could also go too high for a long hill with your current fitness level. Really high cadences may start to burn in a different way, and it puts more stress on you cardiovascularly. This is something you can improve more with training than using harder gears and lower cadences on long hills, just because this is an endurance sport and so it's going to be harder to work on sustaining more strength over long periods of time. With longer hills, you probably just want to pick a sustainable tempo. So this may not be the quick spin up a short gradual hill technique or the power up a short steep hill technique but something in the middle. Steady, sustainable watts maybe at 80-90rpms.
.

It'll make you a more efficient pedaler all the time.
