Cadence, who needs it?
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Threads on BF without insults are really not worthy. Besides, insults are a self-propelling force racking up far more pages than people are polite and agree.
But getting back on track, at what point does a high cadence become too high and actually become detrimental? Not possible?
But getting back on track, at what point does a high cadence become too high and actually become detrimental? Not possible?
The ticker couldn't tolerate a MAX output before it beats itself up.
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We should keep in mind that this discussion really only matters for a rather small range of RPMs. 80-120. (Really 90-110.) Yes, some of us ride outside those limits but racers only do uphill, especially when gear limited like the old days and briefly when very high powers are needed (or on the track - again, gear limited).
What isn't being discussed here is what bodily resources are being consumed by riding at these different rpms. Low rpms - the ability of the muscles to keep applying that force, and more important in races, higher forces and rpms later when it matters. High rpms - more energy expended. With smart eating and replenishment, this can be offset to a degree but the ability to do so must be trained on. And - very important, different riders have different abilities at both of these (not radically different rpm-wise) extremes.Heavier and more muscular riders will be less efficient at high rpms. The skinny guys wear themselves out trying to lug the lower rpms but can spin the fast stuff relatively easily.
Conversely, low rpms don't drain the body as rapidly of sugars so more is 'in the tank" at the end. The spinners have less fuel but their muscle fiber hasn't done a whole lot and is ready to handle a few minutes in that big gear. And again, different bodies have different tank sizes and cylinder volumes (to use car analogies; smart drivers drive the race with what they got).
There are other factors too. One is not often discussed - although its biggest advocate benefited greatly from it - oxygen performance enhancers. That advocate? Lance Armstrong. (Well, he never came out and said anything until long after, but his performances were a stark tribute to EPO's oxygen uptake improvement and therefore ability to ride those higher rpms to advantage.) He was not a spinner who could ride the world off his wheel up mountains before EPO. It would be fun to see a study of what happened to average rpm over the EPO years and see if it has settled down some since.
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Downhill on a fix gear. I"m not superman!
We should keep in mind that this discussion really only matters for a rather small range of RPMs. 80-120. (Really 90-110.) Yes, some of us ride outside those limits but racers only do uphill, especially when gear limited like the old days and briefly when very high powers are needed (or on the track - again, gear limited).
What isn't being discussed here is what bodily resources are being consumed by riding at these different rpms. Low rpms - the ability of the muscles to keep applying that force, and more important in races, higher forces and rpms later when it matters. High rpms - more energy expended. With smart eating and replenishment, this can be offset to a degree but the ability to do so must be trained on. And - very important, different riders have different abilities at both of these (not radically different rpm-wise) extremes.Heavier and more muscular riders will be less efficient at high rpms. The skinny guys wear themselves out trying to lug the lower rpms but can spin the fast stuff relatively easily.
Conversely, low rpms don't drain the body as rapidly of sugars so more is 'in the tank" at the end. The spinners have less fuel but their muscle fiber hasn't done a whole lot and is ready to handle a few minutes in that big gear. And again, different bodies have different tank sizes and cylinder volumes (to use car analogies; smart drivers drive the race with what they got).
There are other factors too. One is not often discussed - although its biggest advocate benefited greatly from it - oxygen performance enhancers. That advocate? Lance Armstrong. (Well, he never came out and said anything until long after, but his performances were a stark tribute to EPO's oxygen uptake improvement and therefore ability to ride those higher rpms to advantage.) He was not a spinner who could ride the world off his wheel up mountains before EPO. It would be fun to see a study of what happened to average rpm over the EPO years and see if it has settled down some since.
We should keep in mind that this discussion really only matters for a rather small range of RPMs. 80-120. (Really 90-110.) Yes, some of us ride outside those limits but racers only do uphill, especially when gear limited like the old days and briefly when very high powers are needed (or on the track - again, gear limited).
What isn't being discussed here is what bodily resources are being consumed by riding at these different rpms. Low rpms - the ability of the muscles to keep applying that force, and more important in races, higher forces and rpms later when it matters. High rpms - more energy expended. With smart eating and replenishment, this can be offset to a degree but the ability to do so must be trained on. And - very important, different riders have different abilities at both of these (not radically different rpm-wise) extremes.Heavier and more muscular riders will be less efficient at high rpms. The skinny guys wear themselves out trying to lug the lower rpms but can spin the fast stuff relatively easily.
Conversely, low rpms don't drain the body as rapidly of sugars so more is 'in the tank" at the end. The spinners have less fuel but their muscle fiber hasn't done a whole lot and is ready to handle a few minutes in that big gear. And again, different bodies have different tank sizes and cylinder volumes (to use car analogies; smart drivers drive the race with what they got).
There are other factors too. One is not often discussed - although its biggest advocate benefited greatly from it - oxygen performance enhancers. That advocate? Lance Armstrong. (Well, he never came out and said anything until long after, but his performances were a stark tribute to EPO's oxygen uptake improvement and therefore ability to ride those higher rpms to advantage.) He was not a spinner who could ride the world off his wheel up mountains before EPO. It would be fun to see a study of what happened to average rpm over the EPO years and see if it has settled down some since.
Hour record attempts are typically in the 90-100 rpm range too, usually at the higher end. Ganna averaged 98 rpm when setting the latest record.
Last edited by PeteHski; 01-24-23 at 06:43 AM.
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That's why this thread fails. Because people are arguing from 'gear calculator' reductio ad absurdum extremes. Who in their right mind would use 34 x 23 to reel someone in? No one. When I say "I don't care what gear" I kind of expected someone to throw out some absurdly low big ring gear, but not a small ring gear. You got me there. I stand by my argument. The faster cadence prevails. No one slows their cadence to go faster. No one at all. They may slow their cadence and gear up to maintain a cruise speed but when you want to pour on the power for a finish sprint or to catch a breakaway it would go against every physical instinct to decrease cadence at that point and I am certain it is only on Bike Forums that this would elicit any argument. I also didn't miss the post (not yours) about someone aging out of their 250rpm (now 200rpm) cadence. At 70 years old no less.
You're postulating a 150 rpm cadence. That's basically a reductio ad absurdum extreme. I don't think it's unreasonable to assume someone pedaling at that rate is doing so at a very low gear.
I actually push the reductio ad absurdum high gear for hours at a time. For my legs, it's very efficient. I'm not built like a racer, so racing technique generally doesn't apply to me very well.
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"Detrimental" depends on what you're trying to maximize. The simplest case is if you're trying to maximize power: in that case, most of us attain max power in the neighborhood of half of maximum cadence (and half of max torque). There's a reason for that: max pedal force and max pedal speed are nearly linearly (negatively) related.
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Because of gearing, when we look at cadence across individuals, slowish individuals may have cadences about 75% of faster spinning individuals. OTOH, lower power individuals may have output that's a third of more powerful individuals. There's far more variation in pedal force across individuals than there is in cadence. Cadence is a red herring. I tend to use cadence prescriptions as an indication about the prescriber.
Last edited by RChung; 01-24-23 at 08:54 AM.
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Until very recently, most hour record attempts were done above 100 rpm. Obree was an exception, at below 90. If you look around on the intertoobs, lots of riders, including coaches who advised high cadences for those of us with more plebian abilities, would say, "it's no coincidence that hour records are set at 105 rpm."
I was talking about max output, not sub-maximal. Most (many?) of us have max cadence somewhere in the range of 200 to 250 rpm, so max output is rarely achieved at more than 120ish rpm. That said, if max output is produced in the range of 120ish, there's really no reason why sub-max (considerably sub-max, in the case of 1 hour duration) should be higher than that.
Because of gearing, when we look at cadence across individuals, slowish individuals may have cadences about 75% of faster spinning individuals. OTOH, lower power individuals may have output that's a third of more powerful individuals. There's far more variation in pedal force across individuals than there is in cadence. Cadence is a red herring. I tend to use cadence prescriptions as an indication about the prescriber.
I was talking about max output, not sub-maximal. Most (many?) of us have max cadence somewhere in the range of 200 to 250 rpm, so max output is rarely achieved at more than 120ish rpm. That said, if max output is produced in the range of 120ish, there's really no reason why sub-max (considerably sub-max, in the case of 1 hour duration) should be higher than that.
Because of gearing, when we look at cadence across individuals, slowish individuals may have cadences about 75% of faster spinning individuals. OTOH, lower power individuals may have output that's a third of more powerful individuals. There's far more variation in pedal force across individuals than there is in cadence. Cadence is a red herring. I tend to use cadence prescriptions as an indication about the prescriber.
My FTP is around 75% that of an average Pro (although W/kg more like 70% or less as I'm not as lean), but my cadence is probably within 10% of typical Pros. So I get your point about pedal force variation across riders, but I'm not sure I agree with your statement about cadence being a red herring. My untrained cadence was significantly lower than it is today and I definitely gained both power and endurance from training with a higher cadence. Untrained I was generally riding at around 75-80 rpm at tempo, now I'm up in the high 80s to low 90s average. So I'm fairly convinced that training to push your cadence a little higher is of significant benefit. That's not to say I don't work on the pedal force side too. For me they are both important if your aim is to improve power output.
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This is quite interesting thanks. Why do you think hour record cadence has recently trended a little lower? I remember reading about Joss Lowden running a relatively low cadence for her hour record i.e. 90 rpm. I'm far more interested in sustained power than maximum sprint power (as an endurance rider).
My FTP is around 75% that of an average Pro (although W/kg more like 70% or less as I'm not as lean), but my cadence is probably within 10% of typical Pros. So I get your point about pedal force variation across riders, but I'm not sure I agree with your statement about cadence being a red herring. My untrained cadence was significantly lower than it is today and I definitely gained both power and endurance from training with a higher cadence. Untrained I was generally riding at around 75-80 rpm at tempo, now I'm up in the high 80s to low 90s average. So I'm fairly convinced that training to push your cadence a little higher is of significant benefit. That's not to say I don't work on the pedal force side too. For me they are both important if your aim is to improve power output.
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Wow, this thread got all crazy. The answers are there, sort of subliminally in all the various posts. The theory is pretty simple: at the same speed, higher cadence = higher O2 consumption, lower cadence = higher leg force. There's always a balance to be found between these two, which will vary with the individual rider's physiology, the length of the ride, and the incline of the road. There's no right answer for everyone. Hence the reason that Lance spun 110-115 TTing was that he was on EPO which increases aerobic ability, and thus biases the rider toward higher cadence. We see the same thing in modern pros. Better aerobic ability means your legs don't get as tired and you slaughter your opponent near the top of the climb.
That said, to best exploit both ends of the cadence range, one needs to do some low cadence high effort work as well as high cadence low effort work. One should be comfortable all the way from 50 to 120 cadence, and both ends for say 30' at a time. Low cadence work will give your legs more endurance and high cadence work will reduce the amount of wasted effort in your pedal stroke at all cadences.
Having done that work, you'll find that there's a perfect cadence for you for all occasions, and it'll be different for each. The trick is to acquire the experience though experimentation to figure out what cadence to use when. When I ride, I watch cadence, power, and HR, in that order. I almost never look at speed. I'll watch elevation on a really long climb. Watching cadence is all about efficiency at the desired effort level, which is a major goal on most of my rides. It took me years of experimentation to figure out when to use what cadence.
As to why the Big Guy used a low cadence, maybe it's because he was a big guy and high cadence would have cost him too much oxygen? Do we know his VO2max compared with Lance, both juiced? Or maybe he just never trained outside his comfort zone? He was definitely lazy for such a high performer.
That said, to best exploit both ends of the cadence range, one needs to do some low cadence high effort work as well as high cadence low effort work. One should be comfortable all the way from 50 to 120 cadence, and both ends for say 30' at a time. Low cadence work will give your legs more endurance and high cadence work will reduce the amount of wasted effort in your pedal stroke at all cadences.
Having done that work, you'll find that there's a perfect cadence for you for all occasions, and it'll be different for each. The trick is to acquire the experience though experimentation to figure out what cadence to use when. When I ride, I watch cadence, power, and HR, in that order. I almost never look at speed. I'll watch elevation on a really long climb. Watching cadence is all about efficiency at the desired effort level, which is a major goal on most of my rides. It took me years of experimentation to figure out when to use what cadence.
As to why the Big Guy used a low cadence, maybe it's because he was a big guy and high cadence would have cost him too much oxygen? Do we know his VO2max compared with Lance, both juiced? Or maybe he just never trained outside his comfort zone? He was definitely lazy for such a high performer.
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I think Ganna used taller gearing than many others would be able to. But I also think there are aero drag reasons both to use shorter cranks and taller gearing (which decreases pedal speed even more). Shorter cranks can improve positioning, and lower cadence can improve drag (ceteris paribus) because the legs churn the air.
I had edited my post to observe that for an individual, max output is typically 5x to 6x higher than "threshold" or "cruising" output but cadence at max output isn't 5x to 6x greater than threshold cadence. Your power has increased but your cadence almost surely didn't increase proportionately, so your pedal force increased also. You're pedaling faster because your power output is higher -- but there's a limit to how high your cadence can realistically go. Cyclists have been racing since there have been bikes but for most of the intervening time they've only been able to observe cadence, not power or pedal force, so cadence was the thing they fixated on. This is cargo cult: they imitated the thing that they could see fast riders doing but they couldn't see the underlying pedal force or power. That's why cadence is a red herring. It's mostly a dependent variable, not an independent one.
I had edited my post to observe that for an individual, max output is typically 5x to 6x higher than "threshold" or "cruising" output but cadence at max output isn't 5x to 6x greater than threshold cadence. Your power has increased but your cadence almost surely didn't increase proportionately, so your pedal force increased also. You're pedaling faster because your power output is higher -- but there's a limit to how high your cadence can realistically go. Cyclists have been racing since there have been bikes but for most of the intervening time they've only been able to observe cadence, not power or pedal force, so cadence was the thing they fixated on. This is cargo cult: they imitated the thing that they could see fast riders doing but they couldn't see the underlying pedal force or power. That's why cadence is a red herring. It's mostly a dependent variable, not an independent one.
This is one of those pieces of conventional wisdom I hear all the time that is just obviously wrong--that torque doesn't vary much from person to person so focus on cadence. It's obviously absurd as it's incredibly easy to see how much leg strength varies from person to person in anything involving weights. Why would pushing pedals be any different?
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This is one of those pieces of conventional wisdom I hear all the time that is just obviously wrong--that torque doesn't vary much from person to person so focus on cadence. It's obviously absurd as it's incredibly easy to see how much leg strength varies from person to person in anything involving weights. Why would pushing pedals be any different?
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This is one of those pieces of conventional wisdom I hear all the time that is just obviously wrong--that torque doesn't vary much from person to person so focus on cadence. It's obviously absurd as it's incredibly easy to see how much leg strength varies from person to person in anything involving weights. Why would pushing pedals be any different?
As for pushing pedals, it's different from static weight training in that you are generally nowhere near your typical "10-rep" muscle force that you might push in the gym. You are pretty much always limited by your aerobic performance in cycling, not your outright muscle strength. Dr Andrew Coggan discusses these differences in his books. That's not to say strength training isn't beneficial for cycling. Just that the muscle loading is very different.
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That is not "conventional wisdom" where I live and ride. Maybe a very old-school myth I've never heard before?
As for pushing pedals, it's different from static weight training in that you are generally nowhere near your typical "10-rep" muscle force that you might push in the gym. You are pretty much always limited by your aerobic performance in cycling, not your outright muscle strength. Dr Andrew Coggan discusses these differences in his books. That's not to say strength training isn't beneficial for cycling. Just that the muscle loading is very different.
As for pushing pedals, it's different from static weight training in that you are generally nowhere near your typical "10-rep" muscle force that you might push in the gym. You are pretty much always limited by your aerobic performance in cycling, not your outright muscle strength. Dr Andrew Coggan discusses these differences in his books. That's not to say strength training isn't beneficial for cycling. Just that the muscle loading is very different.
I'm thinking that it is some old school thinking, and I'm very glad to hear people aren't saying this much these days. In principle, though, I think we've all been saying that the aerobic limits are less important if you can push a big gear. That's the trade-off we've all been discussing.
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I think Ganna used taller gearing than many others would be able to. But I also think there are aero drag reasons both to use shorter cranks and taller gearing (which decreases pedal speed even more). Shorter cranks can improve positioning, and lower cadence can improve drag (ceteris paribus) because the legs churn the air.
I had edited my post to observe that for an individual, max output is typically 5x to 6x higher than "threshold" or "cruising" output but cadence at max output isn't 5x to 6x greater than threshold cadence. Your power has increased but your cadence almost surely didn't increase proportionately, so your pedal force increased also. You're pedaling faster because your power output is higher -- but there's a limit to how high your cadence can realistically go. Cyclists have been racing since there have been bikes but for most of the intervening time they've only been able to observe cadence, not power or pedal force, so cadence was the thing they fixated on. This is cargo cult: they imitated the thing that they could see fast riders doing but they couldn't see the underlying pedal force or power. That's why cadence is a red herring. It's mostly a dependent variable, not an independent one.
I had edited my post to observe that for an individual, max output is typically 5x to 6x higher than "threshold" or "cruising" output but cadence at max output isn't 5x to 6x greater than threshold cadence. Your power has increased but your cadence almost surely didn't increase proportionately, so your pedal force increased also. You're pedaling faster because your power output is higher -- but there's a limit to how high your cadence can realistically go. Cyclists have been racing since there have been bikes but for most of the intervening time they've only been able to observe cadence, not power or pedal force, so cadence was the thing they fixated on. This is cargo cult: they imitated the thing that they could see fast riders doing but they couldn't see the underlying pedal force or power. That's why cadence is a red herring. It's mostly a dependent variable, not an independent one.
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I'm thinking that it is some old school thinking, and I'm very glad to hear people aren't saying this much these days. In principle, though, I think we've all been saying that the aerobic limits are less important if you can push a big gear. That's the trade-off we've all been discussing.
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Interesting points. I can see what you mean about cadence being a dependent variable on a single-speed bike, but multiple gearing allows you to effectively select your cadence for a given power level. My cadence is limited by HR and muscle coordination. If I spin at 130 rpm for a few minutes, even at modest power, then I find my HR soon hits threshold and I have to focus to avoid bouncing in the saddle. It's really not comfortable or sustainable for me! My pedal force on the other hand is limited more by muscle fatigue. Ultimately I try to work on both increasing cadence and pedal force. I've found 85-90 rpm to be my optimum cadence at threshold power (it's about the limit where I can keep control of my HR). If I drop below 80 rpm at threshold power then I feel more limited by muscle fatigue after 20 or so minutes and I start to bog down. So it's clearly a balancing act. Out on the road I tend to vary my cadence periodically and give it very little conscious thought!
Back when I was strong and could easily do what I'm talking about, I used 45-50 g.i. at maybe 90 watts, 116-117 cadence, 45' no breaks. Didn't have power then. Now, I'm limited to ~110 cadence, g.i. don't much matter - I'm using 23 g.i.

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Interesting points. I can see what you mean about cadence being a dependent variable on a single-speed bike, but multiple gearing allows you to effectively select your cadence for a given power level. My cadence is limited by HR and muscle coordination. If I spin at 130 rpm for a few minutes, even at modest power, then I find my HR soon hits threshold and I have to focus to avoid bouncing in the saddle. It's really not comfortable or sustainable for me! My pedal force on the other hand is limited more by muscle fatigue. Ultimately I try to work on both increasing cadence and pedal force. I've found 85-90 rpm to be my optimum cadence at threshold power (it's about the limit where I can keep control of my HR). If I drop below 80 rpm at threshold power then I feel more limited by muscle fatigue after 20 or so minutes and I start to bog down. So it's clearly a balancing act. Out on the road I tend to vary my cadence periodically and give it very little conscious thought!

cadence and crank torque during a hillclimb
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Just ride and don't worry about your cadence.