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  1. #16
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Riding my Luna & Rivendell in the Hudson Valley, NY
    Posts
    8,411

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    Quote Originally Posted by beetle View Post
    so for my practice and drills should I stay in the gear/cadence that I'm overspinning/bouncing and try to smooth it out OR should I gear up to build up my muscle strength and where the pedalling feeling smoother and gear down as my pedalling improves
    I did the latter because it just seemed more natural. I think you naturally tend to gain cadence speed as you ride more.
    Lisa
    My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
    My personal blog:My blog
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  2. #17
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    DE
    Posts
    1,210
    Quote Originally Posted by Kimmyt View Post

    I have no idea to figure out how fast I'm spinning (do comps tell you that?) but know when i'm going 'fast' versus spinning 'slow'. This morning I noticed the bouncing thing on my commute. It was cold, and I wanted to go fast. When I shifted into another gear though, it felt too much like mashing. So I dropped my heels a bit, particularly during the upstroke, and immediately noticed a difference. I'll have to work on doing this technique naturally, but at least I've had a bit of a lightbulb!

    K.

    I made a little Excel cheat sheet that I taped to my stem. It looks like this but with black borders around each. I set my computer to elapsed time mode, so that it shows me a readout in seconds. I start counting the pedal revolutions when the seconds are on "1" and count for 10 seconds, or when the readout is at 10 seconds. When I am working on cadence, I will do this several times just to get the feel for whatever cadence I am running, then periodically check to see that I'm still running what I think I'm running. Of course you need to be in a place where you can ride for 10 seconds without worrrying about stops, traffic, pedestrians, etc. You don't want to be glued to the computer readout - just glance back and check it. And if you get distracted, just start again when conditions are right.

    Here's what it looks like. But the actual table has lines and borders for easy reading.and I can't seem to duplicate that here.

    12 72
    13 78
    14 84
    15 90
    16 96

    And sure, I could just do the math in my head, but I found that having the thing taped to the stem reminds me to work on cadence periodically. Without the reminder, I'd probably never think to check it. My next computer will do this for me.

    Martha
    Last edited by withm; 05-08-2007 at 01:51 PM.

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Jersey
    Posts
    294
    Quote Originally Posted by withm View Post
    I made a little Excel cheat sheet that I taped to my stem. It looks like this but with black borders around each. I set my computer to elapsed time mode, so that it shows me a readout in seconds. I start counting the pedal revolutions when the seconds are on "1" and count for 10 seconds, or when the readout is at 10 seconds. When I am working on cadence, I will do this several times just to get the feel for whatever cadence I am running, then periodically check to see that I'm still running what I think I'm running. Of course you need to be in a place where you can ride for 10 seconds without worrrying about stops, traffic, pedestrians, etc. You don't want to be glued to the computer readout - just glance back and check it. And if you get distracted, just start again when conditions are right.

    Here's what it looks like. But the actual table has lines and borders for easy reading.and I can't seem to duplicate that here.

    12 72
    13 78
    14 84
    15 90
    16 96

    And sure, I could just do the math in my head, but I found that having the thing taped to the stem reminds me to work on cadence periodically. Without the reminder, I'd probably never think to check it. My next computer will do this for me.

    Martha
    ahhh very clever

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    91

    How's the resistance?

    I find I bounce when I am spinning fast but don't have adequate resistance -- easy to do on gentle downhills without changing gears. At some point, the faster the bike goes, the faster you can spin -- but at some point even your spin cadence won't match the speed of the bike in the given gear. If you can maintain the same fast cadence, try the next gear to add a bit of resistance and see if that doesn't help cure the bounce as well.

 

 

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