
Thx for those responses.
In just a general net article from a link I found here on TE, the "flick of the left elbow" was the sign to get off the front. Check traffic, then move over left, soft pedal to float back.
That is very interesting about the state specific signals. Next club ride, I will ask around to our leaders if there is something for our area that most peeps should know. Or, if the wind is not so strong that you can hear... "pulling off!" is pretty obvious
I would think. Or, stating, "let's pull for 2mins" is good. I somehow had this feeling that they might not have really understood about rotating too.
I kinda felt the same way as to what IndySteel was saying. Being cautious when you don't know the peeps.
Point in case of knowing your partners...
The gal that has become my regular riding partner apart from club rides, is not really "interested in learning / doing a full pace line rotation" she's told me (doesn't want to ride that effort, etc.). Which is ok with me when I'm with her. But, still the less... we end up taking turns riding off each other's wheel with traffic and the need to be single file etc.
I *know* from riding with her
enough, that she is a "pedal, pedal, X # strokes then *coast X sec*... resume pedal". Thus, I stay slightly further back, and anticipate that she has not had a *coast* stroke in a while & prepare to re-act.
One of my super strong guy buddies... is 90rpm cadence consistently come he$$ or high H2O until there is a hand signal to slow. Him... I follow much closer than my gal friend.