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RyanW2050
Dec 24, 2008, 3:54 PM
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I gym climb 3 days a week (Tue/Thu/Sat) and i'm planning on getting a nice road bike to ride to work on offdays. (6 miles each way) My question is this: Is riding 12 miles on my offdays going to allow proper recovery?
(This post was edited by RyanW2050 on Dec 31, 2008, 10:45 PM)
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churningindawake
Dec 24, 2008, 4:18 PM
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RyanW2050 wrote: I gym climb 3 days a week (Tue/Thu/Sat) and i'm planning on getting a nice road bike to ride to work on offdays. (6 miles each way) My question is this: Is riding 12 miles on my offdays going to allow proper recovery? Yes!
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jakedatc
Dec 24, 2008, 4:51 PM
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Definitely.. it also makes approaches easier with the increased cardio and leg workout.
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churningindawake
Dec 24, 2008, 4:53 PM
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jakedatc wrote: Definitely.. it also makes approaches easier with the increased cardio and leg workout. Definitely helps the approaches. i also found that it helped stemming pitches. Would make it so that your legs did not get so pumped.
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hopperhopper
Dec 24, 2008, 5:48 PM
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It will allow most of the muscles you fatigue while climbing to rest, but I've always been a proponent of true rest days (little or no activity). Whatever energy you're expending on the bike is energy not used to repair muscles.
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abe_ascends
Dec 24, 2008, 5:49 PM
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RyanW2050 wrote: I gym climb 3 days a week (Tue/Thu/Sat) and i'm planning on getting a nice road bike to ride to work on offdays. (6 miles each way) My question is this: Is riding 12 miles on my offdays going to allow proper recovery? Absolutely. Your "off" days should be days of active rest, not so much of the sitting on the couch. Bicycle rides will increase blood flow throughout the body and thus facilitate a proper recovery.
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jman
Dec 24, 2008, 5:53 PM
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Should be okay. My climbing rest days are 10 to 15 mile long run days. IMO the extra cardio will probably help with climbing cause I noticed I started to climbing a lot stronger when I lost some weight and increased my aerobic strength.
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boracus
Dec 25, 2008, 5:15 PM
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R- If you're not used to the riding you may notice a little decrease in your gym session intensity at first but after a few weeks the 12miles shouldn't be much of a work load for you. From personal experience I would suggest fiddling w/ your position on the bike, at least w/ respect to your upper body. This may not be an issue for you at all but your arms and shoulders do function at least partially as shock absorbers since you're not in a completely upright position. Sometimes the static position of being on the bike can be a bitch after climbing the day before, though 12miles goes pretty fast and you may not notice anything from it. Just throwing it out there. Enjoy the increased fitness, it's nice to have the extra cardio so that you're not quite so tapped when you have to hike an hour in to get to the crag. cheers, BA
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thatguyat99
Dec 25, 2008, 7:02 PM
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Just to add... If you don't sprint to work then a leisurely pace on the bike should help with keeping things loose on those days. Plus commuting on a bike just sets the pace for a good day. It's a big difference stress wise.
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aerili
Dec 26, 2008, 7:39 PM
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RyanW2050 wrote: I gym climb 3 days a week (Tue/Thu/Sat) and i'm planning on getting a nice road bike to ride to work on offdays. (6 miles each way) My question is this: Is riding 12 miles on my offdays going to allow proper recovery? So exactly how many off days will this constitute? This is important to know. It also kind of depends on what your primary physical goals are. If you are gym climbing, I assume that strength gains and anaerobic endurance are important to you, probably more so than any aerobic endurance goals. If one is more important to you than another, which one? I assume climbing because you are asking on a climbing forum. I would say it's possible if you are climbing and riding 6 days per week combined, you are doing too much and this could possibly impede recovery. Your upper body does do some work while riding, so you may notice some fatigue esp. in the stabilizers of the shoulder girdle (which you do use in climbing too). Also, however, you may be able to work up to this volume of both eventually and have no real recovery concerns, but actually I would say you should try riding and climbing on some of the same days and have complete rest days on the other days. "Interestingly, when aerobic endurance and strength training are performed on the same day there did not appear to be any detrimental effects on the ability of the subjects to increase their strength or aerobic capacity. Although the daily training volume may be greater in reduced weekly training frequencies, the rest between each exercise session may be sufficient to allow complete recovery." --Jay Hoffman, PhD, "Concurrent Training (Part I)," National Strength and Conditioning Assoc.
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RyanW2050
Dec 26, 2008, 8:58 PM
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On paper, the idea is to ride to work on M/W/F, climb on Tu/Th/Sat leaving Sunday free for a longer ride or complete rest. Realistically, i'll sleep in or drive due to weather some days, so an average of 2 days per week commuting is reasonable. In response to what is more important, climbing definitely is. I was actually hoping that the cardio would help me a little on sport climbs.
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jakedatc
Dec 26, 2008, 10:07 PM
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^^^ exactly.. for normal riding i don't bother going out unless it's over 20mi it takes me 8-10mi just to get warmed up. I don't believe the arm use on the bike is detrimental to either recovery or prior to the next gym session.. It's road riding.. it's not like you're pounding over stuff like mtn biking.
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aerili
Dec 26, 2008, 11:18 PM
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Got it. If it works in your climbing day schedule, why don't you try actually doing your work rides on the same days as you climb, with the exception of maybe riding one extra day to work (when you feel like it)? Give it 3 weeks or so to see how you progress and feel. I used to ride 16 miles (8 each way) to and from work sometimes, and even though I was far from "terrible, awful, near death fitness," the commute was certainly factored into how else I trained those weeks. Everyone responds to training stimulus differently, so what angry and jake don't see is that I am offering advice based on a middle road for you considering that I don't know your age, general aerobic fitness level, body comp, whether your commute route is flat or not, etc. So I'm viewing you as a probable mostly anaerobically fit person who's endurance may not be that great. It's true you may find riding 12 miles a day feels like "nothing," but I've trained other anaerobically fit people who find similar aerobic workouts moderately effortful (at least for a while); thus, this does impact their overall workload for the week. More than one study has found that 6 days a week of alternating strength and aerobic training can negatively impact the strength (which is why I wanted to clarify how many "off" days you would add). Hence my suggestion to combine your training on the same days if you can--since this was found to be more successful for maintaining strength (and endurance was unaffected). You may be perfectly fine one way or the other, my advice is just being conservative wrt recovery for you.
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ryanb
Dec 26, 2008, 11:50 PM
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Just listen to your body and rest when you need to. When there isn't snow on the ground I generally bike commute 10 miles and then bike to the gym after. (It beats having to find parking at my gym on a busy night). Also, if you aren't actually going to be road racing, look into getting a cyclocross bike for commuting. They offer the same geometry/layout/wheel size of a proper road bike but have better brakes and room to mount fenders and thicker or more aggressive tires.
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scotchie
Dec 27, 2008, 12:43 AM
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I used to ride to work ~ 10 miles per day about 4 days per week, gym climb 2x/week, lift weights 2x/week, and go mountain biking 1x/week, and I didn't notice any less performance because of the commute. I'd say I was in good but not fantastic shape. I made some pretty good gains in my gym climbing during that time (5.8 to 5.10). This is for light to moderate pace on flat roads with breaks at stoplights. Biking to work is a lot of fun, and it feels great. On the downside, there are serious safety concerns with riding bikes in most cities, plus some lack of freedom to make impromptu plans. I'd say just bike to work when it's convenient, regardless of whether you are climbing or not. Combining your biking and climbing days will give you the better recovery, but you aren't talking about biking enough to need a lot of it.
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jakedatc
Dec 27, 2008, 12:55 AM
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I dunno about that Ryan.. you can fit fenders on just about any bike.. even if you have to do what i did and use Race blades that clip on and make some extensions to keep you drier. how do cyclocross bikes have better brakes? V brakes aren't better than caliper brakes like on a road bike.. so unless he's going to a disc brake then i don't see much difference. the kind with mtn bike brake levers in the middle of road handlebars are not that great IMO ... i thought i'd want them until i tried them and i prefer road levers on a road bike. they also don't have the same geometry ... cyclo bikes have a higher bottom bracket "The major differences between the two are the frame geometry and the wider clearances for thicker tires" -wiki thicker more aggressive tires will just make him use more energy and be slower you can get up to like 28's on a regular frame i think.. perhaps more on a touring frame. either way i bet he already has a bike.. so it's all a mute point I dont' see how doing strength and cardio on one day is any different than doing it on alternating days.. i don't see how your body would know the difference like that. it's doing both training either way.. it's not like he's doing 100 days of strength and then 100 days of endurance. that i could see messing with one an other PLUS you're not working the same muscles at all so you're not working your upper body while on the bike and you're not strength training your legs while climbing so it makes no sense. I don't believe you really ride any distance if you believe that 6mi on a road bike will effect him if he's in any kind of shape at all.. 6 mi will take me 25 mins at a fairly slow pace of 15mph. And if i only had to go 6 mi i'd be doing much faster than that. Bikeforums.net has a good forum on Commuting that you may find useful.
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scotchie
Dec 27, 2008, 1:11 AM
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aerili wrote: I would say you should try riding and climbing on some of the same days and have complete rest days on the other days. "Interestingly, when aerobic endurance and strength training are performed on the same day there did not appear to be any detrimental effects on the ability of the subjects to increase their strength or aerobic capacity. Although the daily training volume may be greater in reduced weekly training frequencies, the rest between each exercise session may be sufficient to allow complete recovery." --Jay Hoffman, PhD, "Concurrent Training (Part I)," National Strength and Conditioning Assoc. Thanks for pointing this out! I have a different question. I am trying to train climbing, strength, and (eventually) aerobic at the same time, and it's hard finding time to get all the workouts in! So I'm trying to make the best use of recovery time possible. Any suggestions on climbing and weightlifting? Is it better to do them same-day or alternate? How many rest days / week are needed? Two? PS: The weightlifting is for shoulder rehab plus opposition muscles, not general purpose bodybuilding.
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ryanb
Dec 27, 2008, 5:56 AM
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Jakedatc, cross bikes are built to be raced on steep courses in muddy conditions and will take a lot of abuse and ride like new with a hose down and a bit of lube... They have good brakes. Lots do have discs these days, but v brakes do work better then cantilevers ...there is a reason they stopped using cantilevers on mountain bikes when v's were developed. They have a racing geometry. They have more ground clearance yes, but good ones are still designed with performance in mind. Wheel clearance wise, I run 30 something specialized armadillos (great tires btw) with room for real fenders and haven't had a flat in two years of daily comuting through an industrial area packed with gravel, potholes, train tracks... Road bikes are great too but i am sold on cross bikes for commuters who don't have a ton of time to spend on maintenance.
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angry
Dec 28, 2008, 8:34 AM
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Ah the bullshit is flying. Stop defending your way of biking as THE way of biking. Fact: A cross bike has different geometry than a road bike. Fact: A cross bike is similar enough to be ACA and USCF legal on the road. Fact: V brakes are more powerful than road calipers Fact: You'll be skidding long before this matters Fact: A poorly maintained bike rides poorly. Road, Mountain, Cross, etc. Fact: There are not cross specific drivetrains. They are either road or mountain or creative combinations of the two. Any durability implied in their function has nothing to do with it being on a road or cross bike. Fact: Nine times out of ten, cross wheels are just heavy road wheels. They aren't some sick strong uber hay bale hopping breed. Just the standards built without low spoke counts or funny lacing. Opinion you can take as fact (OYCTF): You'll never notice a cross bike being slower if you run the same tires. A cross bike is usually slower because it has much wider and knobby tires. Duh. OYCTF: You'll never notice the time difference between the two OYCTF: Cross bikes accumulate far fewer miles because they are heavier, harsher, and slower. This is why you think they shift better. If I were to commit to a 6 mile commute, I'd just get a fixie with about a 48x16 ratio and a flip flop hub so I could choose to freewheel or not. With that you do have a bike that truly only requires some lube. It's slower than either the cross or road bike but in 6 miles, that's like 90 seconds each way, tops. Somehow it's really fun. And you can make some old piece of shit totally light and fun to ride. Don't forget, on a fixie you can wear girls pants and a bike lock as a belt and no-one will even mention it. That's power.
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blu3d0g
Dec 28, 2008, 2:03 PM
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To correct a few more cycling misconceptions here, cross bikes don't use V-brakes, and road bikes don't use cantilevers. Road bikes use dual pivot side pull brakes (very different than cantilevers), and cross bikes use cantis. Cross bikes use cantis because they are more powerful than anything other than disc brakes (or hydraulic brakes of any form), and offer better mud and tire clearance than side pulls. Very few cross bikes offer disc brakes because they aren't legal in UCI sanctioned races. V-brakes mostly exist because they give much better tire and mud clearance than cantis. Cross bikes have CROSS racing geometry, this is very different from ROAD racing geometry. The angles of all the tubes are much slacker, which results in a more upright riding position so your body has an easier time dealing with rough ground on an un-suspended bike. I also don't know of a single cross bike that doesn't come stock with a road drive train, so they take just as much care and feeding as any road bike. Armadillos are great for never ever having a flat, but they have the worst traction of any tire I've ever used. Finally, fixed gears are a blast, but if you have knee problems be prepared to run a small gear ratio and spin a lot. Any single speed bike with a high gear ratio will cause you to exacerbate any knee problems you already have.
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roughster
Dec 28, 2008, 2:14 PM
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Jesus Christ you guys are WAY over thinking this. - Buy a beater Mtb Bike (preferable no suspension) for like $25 off of Craig's List. - Slap on some slicks (I run Armadillos for durability) / Clip On Fenders (~$9) / Back Reflector Light - Flasher thing (most Counties will send one to you for free if you call them), Buy a Blackburn or other cheap LED light to clip on your bars for darkness, Under the Saddle Bag with an extra tube, a repair kit, and multi-tool, finally get a small frame pump, small cable lock. Total cost for all of this (excluding tires) ~$50-$60. Total bike cost should be under $100 w/o tires. Watch Ebay / Craig's list for cheap tires. You can start off with some cheap slicks for like $10-20 a pair, but I personally feel the Armadillos are worth the extra cost for piece of mind. - Every morning look outside, if it is raining drive, if it isn't raining ride. It only matters on the way in, on the way home who cares if you get rained on? - Ride as slow as you can on the way in to enjoy the start of your day. - Ride as fast as you can on the way home for a workout. - Enter all County "Bike to Work" contests etc and collect free gift cards / drawing prizes. - Feel good about doing your part in keeping another car off of the streets. n = 4 years and counting. I only drove to work 6 times last year :) Below is the result of doing exactly described above:
(This post was edited by roughster on Dec 28, 2008, 2:37 PM)
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blu3d0g
Dec 28, 2008, 2:32 PM
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roughster wrote: - Every morning look outside, if it is raining drive, if it isn't raining ride. It only matters on the way in, on the way home who cares if you get rained on? if it is raining just dress appropriately and bring a change of clothes (socks especially). Also, I think your technique is fine as long as you have no interest in serious riding outside of your commute. The above thoughts mostly seem to come from people who do a fair amount of riding in addition to the commute. I commute on a bike no matter what the weather, and I do some road riding and as much mountain biking as I can fit in around climbing.
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roughster
Dec 28, 2008, 2:41 PM
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BD: I found that even geared up for rain it just isn't worth the hassle if you are commuting to work. And like I said, it has to be actively raining to stop me. If the roads are wet because it rained earlier, that's what the fenders are for, I still ride. In the Bay area, I find that there are usually sub-10 days a year where I don't ride due to the policy above.
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blu3d0g
Dec 28, 2008, 2:45 PM
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roughster, Must be nice being in the bay area :-P With that policy you'd ride maybe 2 days a week for half of the year here in Boston. You just need goggles and a face mask for when it starts to hail. The only thing that really stops me from riding after four years here is winds over 45mph. I once got hit by a wind gust and blown across two lanes of (fortunately empty) road.
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roughster
Dec 28, 2008, 3:06 PM
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Yeah, that is one thing you got to give California....it sure has nice bike commuting weather I guess I would have to look at getting serious about weather commuting if I lived in other parts of the country, but fortunately it just isn't an issue around here! I found Bike Commuting was the 1st step to even less car dependency. I almost exclusively ride the bike to the local stores now too for shopping unless I know I am going to buy a ton of groceries or something big. The only time I drive my truck is on the weekends or trips. I was once asked by a coworker why I rode in to work. I told them the truth, because I can. I takes me literally no more than 10 mins longer (if that) to get to work between driving and biking. I like the time it gives me to change mode from home to work "mode" on the way in, and a de-stress time before I get home. I used to fill up my truck once a week (4 x 17 gallons) and now usually do about once a month. My car insurance went down because I told my Insurance Agent I was now cycling to work. If "we" (meaning people who commuting by bike is a viable option) don't do the things we can do to "help" global warming, gas prices, shit whatever your cause is, how can we expect others to? One of my wife's favorite quotes for her classroom (she's a teacher) is: Be the change that you want to see in the world. Mohandas Gandhi Biking to work is a simple way for everyone to start "helping". Hell even if you do it just once a week! Imagine if everyone did that once a week? I hope that at least one person who sees me every day on my ride in thinks, "Hmm maybe I should do that!" That would be totally cool.
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RyanW2050
Dec 29, 2008, 12:12 AM
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I am definitely aware that I don't need a race bike to ride 6 miles to work. I could probably buy a bigwheel and make it. But I want to go fast and i want the ability to do much more than ride to work with it if i so choose. Anyway, i am mostly decided on the Cannondale CAAD9-7. http://www.cannondale.com/bikes/09/cusa/model-9RA97T.html
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angry
Dec 29, 2008, 12:22 AM
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Not a bad choice. Personally, I'd look for anything with a similar component group that wasn't a C-dale. Its a personal bias but I've always found them to be gag me with a stick ugly. Not a bad bike, just ugly.
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btreanor
Dec 29, 2008, 12:24 AM
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churningindawake wrote: jakedatc wrote: Definitely.. it also makes approaches easier with the increased cardio and leg workout. Definitely helps the approaches. i also found that it helped stemming pitches. Would make it so that your legs did not get so pumped. Unless you stretch very, very regularly, a lot of biking will make wide stemming much more difficult. The way biking builds you legs and hips tightens everything up. I'd still keep biking if I were you. Heck, my rule is I don't use a car for anything under 10 miles (1 way), and I bike everyday as a commuter. I just wanted to point out that while biking will help your endurance, will build your legs, and (at a light pace) will actually facilitate recovery, it will likely make the flexibility part of stemming worse. Brian
(This post was edited by btreanor on Dec 29, 2008, 12:25 AM)
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Hotpies
Dec 29, 2008, 1:08 AM
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For the first time I biked quite a bit this summer, and I haven't noticed any flexibility losses, and I stretch only occasionally. Everyone is different I guess.
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RyanW2050
Dec 31, 2008, 10:33 PM
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Well, I bought the bike yesterday. I went with the Cannondale CAAD9-7. I pretty much devastated my checking account but another paycheck came today, so i still need to buy things (water bottle, bike shorts, pedals, shoes, cyclocomputer, etc) I did 10 miles today and climbed last night. I really thought general fitness from climbing would have helped me, but i needed to take like 3 breaks on those 10 miles, haha. I suppose my cardio is lacking. The only muscle soreness i feel is in my middle/lower back alongside my spine. ... and the ass pain from the seat.
(This post was edited by RyanW2050 on Dec 31, 2008, 10:46 PM)
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churningindawake
Dec 31, 2008, 10:40 PM
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RyanW2050 wrote: Well, I bought the bike yesterday. I went with the Cannondale CAAD9-7. I pretty much devastated my checking account but another paycheck came today, so i still need to buy things (water bottle, bike shorts, pedals, shoes, cyclocomputer, etc) I did 10 miles today and climbed last night. I really thought general fitness from climbing would have helped me, but i needed to take like 3 breaks on those 10 miles, haha. I suppose my cardio is lacking. The only muscle soreness i feel is in my middle/lower back alongside my spine. ... and the ass pain from the seat. [image]http://img367.imageshack.us/img367/885/bike123108jc2.jpg[/image] That means that you need to make some adjustments to the bike. Usually a stem with more rise will help your back (allowing you to sit more upright). you can also tilt your handlebars to help you feel more comfortable. As for your butt, try tilting the seat differently, it will help a lot. You can also try different seats to see which one works the best for you. You pretty much just need to ride a lot to make it so that your butt is not so sore after a ride.
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jakedatc
Dec 31, 2008, 11:06 PM
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Yep.. what he said. Did they fit you on the bike? if you bought it from any good place they should have put you on a trainer and measured stuff and had things adjusted for you. If not i would call them, tell them your back was bothering you and they should help fix it. You might need a different stem so you're not reaching too far or perhaps your seat is too high and your hamstrings were pulling I would stretch your hamstrings and low back before your next ride and see if that helps. seat looks a touch tipped down.. might cause you to slide forward a bit. if you put the nose up just a bit and level it out it might help the butt situation.. though bike shorts will help the most. have fun.. things will get easier as you ride a bit more. Try to stay in a gear that you can spin pretty easily. these days 90-100 rpm is a good range. (you can count one of your legs downstrokes for 15 sec then X 4)
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churningindawake
Dec 31, 2008, 11:09 PM
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jakedatc wrote: Yep.. what he said. Did they fit you on the bike? if you bought it from any good place they should have put you on a trainer and measured stuff and had things adjusted for you. If not i would call them, tell them your back was bothering you and they should help fix it. You might need a different stem so you're not reaching too far or perhaps your seat is too high and your hamstrings were pulling I would stretch your hamstrings and low back before your next ride and see if that helps. seat looks a touch tipped down.. might cause you to slide forward a bit. if you put the nose up just a bit and level it out it might help the butt situation.. though bike shorts will help the most. have fun.. things will get easier as you ride a bit more. Try to stay in a gear that you can spin pretty easily. these days 90-100 rpm is a good range. (you can count one of your legs downstrokes for 15 sec then X 4) Definitely try different bike shorts. You will find that you like some a lot better than others. Also when you are riding, try to hold the handlebars different ways to get your body in the most comfortable position possible...
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RyanW2050
Dec 31, 2008, 11:17 PM
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I wasn't really measured. I sat on a 54 and he said it looked too long, so we went with a 52. He mentioned coming back and having it fit, which i'm planning on doing after i buy the rest of the stuff (shoes/pedals, bib). I'm also planning on getting a speedometer with a cadence meter. I think that will help me a lot, because i'm sure my rpm was all over the place.
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churningindawake
Dec 31, 2008, 11:26 PM
Post #36 of 47
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RyanW2050 wrote: I wasn't really measured. I sat on a 54 and he said it looked too long, so we went with a 52. He mentioned coming back and having it fit, which i'm planning on doing after i buy the rest of the stuff (shoes/pedals, bib). I'm also planning on getting a speedometer with a cadence meter. I think that will help me a lot, because i'm sure my rpm was all over the place. Definitely a good idea getting a fit. don't really find the cadence thing needed. Just try to push a steady gear, and keep a smooth pedal stroke. The speedometer is nice though. Lets you know all the stuff that you want to know.
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angry
Dec 31, 2008, 11:42 PM
Post #37 of 47
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I'm not going to even pretend I can evaluate your fit over a single picture. There's volumes written about fit online, easy enough for you to google it. Also, this is especially true of someone who hasn't been biking for eons, you might get sore and that's normal. A bike fit helps but there's no way around it most times, you have to break your body into the bike, at least a little.
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jakedatc
Dec 31, 2008, 11:45 PM
Post #38 of 47
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This is the computer i had on my bike all year until i got my Garmin 305. once you get the sensors set up it's good to go. I definitely liked having cadence when i started riding more this summer to get a feel for what worked best for me.. Now i use it for when i'd rather not look at the speed i'm going.. like into a headwind or when i'm not feeling strong. click to cadence.. just roll the pedals. Only thing i'd worry about is if you were commuting and leaving it locked up somewhere.. http://www.nashbar.com/...%3A%20Cyclocomputers Angry.. all i was going off the picture was the seat.. looks a bit tilted. the small things i said are just guesses.. and since he's going to get fit then it doesn't matter.
(This post was edited by jakedatc on Dec 31, 2008, 11:48 PM)
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churningindawake
Jan 1, 2009, 12:05 AM
Post #39 of 47
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What I said is just stuff that many people do that usually helps them.
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RyanW2050
Jan 1, 2009, 12:18 AM
Post #40 of 47
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I was actually planning on getting the http://www.cateye.com/en/product_detail/407 It looks like it may be the newer version of the Astrale. I'm planning on bringing my bike into my cube until HR yells. It's a pretty big cube though.
(This post was edited by RyanW2050 on Jan 1, 2009, 12:18 AM)
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jakedatc
Jan 1, 2009, 12:33 AM
Post #41 of 47
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the Strada will work too.. i just didnt know what kinda budget you were on. Astrale is discontinued so they are clearing them out places. if they let ya keep it inside then that will be great.
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tigerlilly
Jan 1, 2009, 12:34 AM
Post #42 of 47
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blu3d0g wrote: Cross bikes use cantis because they are more powerful than anything other than disc brakes (or hydraulic brakes of any form). I'd like to see a reference for that statement. I've had center-pulls, side-pulls, roller cams, cantis, V's, hydro rim brakes, hydro disc brakes, drum brakes and cable disc brakes on various bikes, and wouldn't put canti's on a mtn bike if you paid me to. On the road, they'd be ok. Maybe.
blu3d0g wrote: V-brakes mostly exist because they give much better tire and mud clearance than cantis. Ya' got this one backwards, friend. Look at a V brake and look at a canti. The V-brake has way more metal a lot closer to the tire. The canti's got nuthin' but the pad and carrier. V-brakes exist because they are much more powerful than the best-adjusted cantis. Canti's only still exist because of mud clearance and retro geeks. Edit: Canti's work better with road bike brake levers than v-brakes do. V-brakes need a fiddly, PITA adapter to get enough cable pull. V-brakes are so powerful that on some low-end bikes, you'll find a little spring damper on the front brake that actually reduces braking force so inexperienced riders don't fling themselves off over the bars. I had a tough time explaining that to a buddy who bought an inexpensive commuter bike a bunch of years ago. Kathy
(This post was edited by tigerlilly on Jan 6, 2009, 9:15 PM)
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blu3d0g
Jan 1, 2009, 1:54 PM
Post #43 of 47
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tigerlilly, you are absolutely right, I was totally backwards with that. That's what I get for trying to be authoritative about a type of bike I've never owned and a type of riding I don't do I also haven't touched a V-brake in years, as all the bikes I have now either have disc brakes or side pulls. Sounds like you've had had quite the collection of bikes, but what did you have hydro rim brakes on? you a trials rider?
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greatgarbanzo
Jan 1, 2009, 3:06 PM
Post #44 of 47
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I do at least 30K on climbing days. Usually is more around 75K on rest days. I really dont think that 12M every other day will do any harm.
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tigerlilly
Jan 1, 2009, 4:25 PM
Post #45 of 47
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blu3d0g wrote: Sounds like you've had had quite the collection of bikes, but what did you have hydro rim brakes on? you a trials rider? I'm really a cyclist with a climbing habit, and kinda' just a gear whore in general. The current collection is down to 7 bikes. I put the hydro rim brakes on one mtbike before good discs were available, but have since switched to discs. I'm not a trials rider, but did buy a beat-up 2nd-hand Monte mod trials bike with the intent of honing my bike handling skills. Unfortunately, I got it about the same time the climbing addiction started, so I have done very little with it. It needs a new rear wheel, or at least new bearings. To the OP, my first season of climbing, I alternated between riding days and climbing days with no issues and little overlap, but still gave myself a full rest, minimal activity, day once a week. Your body will tell you if you are doing too much. If you feel tired, or lose interest in either activity, take a break. Kathy
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rockie
Jan 1, 2009, 6:06 PM
Post #46 of 47
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Registered: Sep 18, 2007
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tigerlilly wrote: blu3d0g wrote: Sounds like you've had had quite the collection of bikes, but what did you have hydro rim brakes on? you a trials rider? To the OP, my first season of climbing, I alternated between riding days and climbing days with no issues and little overlap, but still gave myself a full rest, minimal activity, day once a week. Your body will tell you if you are doing too much. If you feel tired, or lose interest in either activity, take a break. Kathy I second that, though this is the best bike, and fine to use with slicks too: http://www.mtbr.com/...RD_349500_91crx.aspx And here's what you wear to stop your butt getting sore, even on the more slim race bike saddles which I prefer, never had a problem myself and no fat on me: http://www.wiggle.co.uk/...le/7/Shorts_-_Lycra/ http://www.aerotechdesigns.com/...D67ZcCFcse3godVTQwCw
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AlexCV
Jan 6, 2009, 8:54 PM
Post #47 of 47
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Registered: Jan 25, 2008
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tigerlilly wrote: V-brakes are so powerful that on some low-end bikes, you'll find a little spring damper on the front brake that actually reduces braking force so inexperienced riders don't fling themselves off over the bars. I had a tough time explaining that to a buddy who bought an inexpensive commuter bike a bunch of years ago. First time I needed to do an emergency stop with a V-Brake equipped bike, I kinked the front brake cable and the rammed the pads under the rim. Those things are fscking powerful. Oh yeah it also lifted the bike in a wheely and I got a nice slo-motion over the handlebar (actually off to the side) experience, it was fun.
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