Conversations with Lynda & Dave confirmed what I had started to realize. A power meter would be the best way to gauge my fitness during the season, plan my training, and pace myself during specific events or workouts.
The planets finally aligned and I pulled the trigger on a Power Tap SL 2.4 built into a Reynolds DV46C wheelset.
I have been a loyal Polar 720i user for several years and it has served me well. I religiously wear it on every ride and race, download my rides into the Polar software, and refer back to my Polar workout calendar over time. I have a lot to learn about getting the most out of this new tool but for now I am just going to mount it up, ride, download, and observe.
5 comments:
Sexy rim. I just got that book a couple weeks back and one of the things this winter will be to get power meters on the most ridden bikes and start building the data bank. I bet this will help you step it up even more.
Awesome Dave. Good plan too - for now ;)
Just remember to have fun =)
we are just grown men riding bicycles
"Just remember to have fun =)"
Coming from the guy who eschews gears & freehubs on routes nearly impossible with them...Mr Nice you crack me up!
Seriously though, there is nothing more fun that taking your fitness to a razors edge and rocking a goal. The power meter gives you insight to yourself that intuition fails to grasp...
Rock on Mr Byers!
Well done. This will make your winter training into something beyond your expectations...
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