remind me not to challenge YOU for a race.![]()
remind me not to challenge YOU for a race.![]()
Very nice! Doesn't it make you feel warm and fuzzy inside when you accomplish something you didn't think you could?![]()
Unity is strength. Knowledge is power. Attitude is everything.
How many times did you think you couldn't do it while you were doing it?
Is 90 rpm = 90 full revolutions or half? Oh I get it. 180 bpm = 90 rpm. that's 1.5 full revolutions per second, so on every beat one foot goes down. yeah.
try the pedalradio.com podcasts. I tried my first one last night, was fun to have some new tunes.
It's a little secret you didn't know about us women. We're all closet Visigoths.
2008 Roy Hinnen O2 - Selle SMP Glider
2009 Cube Axial WLS - Selle SMP Glider
2007 Gary Fisher HiFi Plus - Specialized Alias
Thanks folks! About halfway through I was getting really sweaty and tired, but I was armed with raisins which I guess helped. I mean, I've ridden up to 1.5 hours straight outside in the park, but it feels really different on the trainer and trying to keep a steady pace. I really have no idea if what I did would be considered much of an accomplishment by most people, but it felt like one to me!
Never checked out pedalradio before... headed there right now!
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HA!
I never paid much attention to cadence but i did a count today while spinning (not in a class, just by myself)
I got to a point that I felt I was at my push-point resistance,-maybe a little more-and a somewhat fast but not a sprint cadence.
My count was 63
On the other hand, two girls in their early 20's came in while I was there, rode for about three minutes, declared it 'too hard" and left![]()
2008 Trek FX 7.2/Terry Cite X
2009 Jamis Aurora/Brooks B-68
2010 Trek FX 7.6 WSD/stock bontrager
My bike:Slideshow at Picasaweb
My dog: http://hudsonthedog.com
My job: http://racheljimenez.com
Hey, it is definitely a benchmark. Spinning faster develops a different kind of muscular endurance than grinding slower. (Not taking anything away from the muscular endurance it takes to grinder harder/slower...just different.)
Last year, training for my first long climbing ride, it was all I could do to grind up the hills in a low cadence, pushing HARD. I literally just could not pedal faster. Consequently, with all that slow uphill training, my cadence on the flats was slow...and not very versatile.
This winter I have been working on higher cadence and pedal stroke, and it has been hard work! But, I can tell that I am developing a different (and more versatile) part of my cycling skill ('though still at a low level!).
Anyhow, all that to say...yes, it is an accomplishment, and adds to your arsenal of biking tools!![]()
"The best rides are the ones where you bite off much more than you can chew, and live through it." ~ Doug Bradbury
Thanks very much Starfish for that perspective! I have read a bit about the necessity to train spinning and grinding separately, but you made it much clearer.![]()
My bike:Slideshow at Picasaweb
My dog: http://hudsonthedog.com
My job: http://racheljimenez.com