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Old 04-27-08 | 09:28 AM
  #28  
charles vail
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Originally Posted by aley
DataJunkie, thanks - you saved me having to say almost exactly the same thing. If someone's getting the same efficiency and power out of platform pedals as out of clipless or other foot attachment methods (toe clips, Powergrips, whatever), then it's because they're merely mashing on the downstroke, which isn't a particularly efficient way to ride.

A month or so ago I test rode several bikes after not having ridden anything in ages without being clipped in. I'd never quite realized how much pulling up I was doing in my pedal stroke - I kept having my feet leave the pedals on my test rides! Somewhere along the line, I guess I made the transition from a masher to a spinner, but not having my feet attached is what made that noticeable.


The reason you feel like your feet are coming off the pedals is that you have trained your brain to believe your feet are firmly attached. Your legs are not really significantly adding power, they are just de-weighting more than necessary. A few days of riding without being attached will retrain your legs to stay on the pedals. A wide surface area pedal with a grippy shoe will give enough traction even in the wet and provide comfort and convenience for commuting where you may need to stop often in traffic. As an aside I do have a high rpm spin (which is how you develop speed) and I do not 'simply mash'. Making the assumption that I haven't tried 'clipless', mash when I pedal or know nothing about pedaling correctly is a mistake. Open your minds.

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