Thanks for your post about your tandem experience. It's given me some food for thought. We're about a 310 lb team. I've noticed that the lighter you are - the better you climb, but there's a limit to how small I can get.I'm going to think about staying looser when I stand like you said.
Teamwork wise we also tend to be very nonverbal. I think the only time Thom tells me he's shifting is when we're going to have to stop and he needs to downshift. We stand well together - but Thom's heartrate tends to explode when we do it for too long. He just needs more time on the bike - but with a 60 - 90 minute commute each way, it's hard to get the time daily.For us - he has the sprint power, I have the endurance. I've noticed a lot of improvement since we started riding with the racer boys on Sunday. We can't hang with them for the whole ride - but we're getting further each time.
Veronica



Reply With Quote
I'm going to think about staying looser when I stand like you said.
For us - he has the sprint power, I have the endurance. I've noticed a lot of improvement since we started riding with the racer boys on Sunday. We can't hang with them for the whole ride - but we're getting further each time.
, and I'd like to find another tandem partner ('nother woman is fine, just really like the speed of the things!) but need to know the tricks. Do you read the cadence and follow when it slows, does the captain give a special grunt, what? This guy would just stop his legs with no warning and jerk my knee HARD! I have a time trial hammerhead style so this was probably a mismatch made in bike hell, but how do you all communicate?
