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That seems pretty good for being on knobbies. Do you race cross?
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Originally Posted by umd
(Post 10569180)
That seems pretty good for being on knobbies. Do you race cross?
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Depends on how knobby the tires were. I have moderately knobby tires on my cross bike and measure with my power meter a 10-15% increase in effort to do the same speed.
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They are getting more worn (new ones on Friday). Either way they don't start off that knobby (Kenda Kwick). Perhaps the extra input needed makes me a stronger rider, that and riding most every day.
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I just thought of a way to answer this absolutely correctly........but still kind of meaningless....
My garmin currently has about 2500 miles on the ODO. Working out the average speed based on the total time time the data has been recorded over gets me an average of 15mph on the dot. So when I ride I average 15mph. BUT that includes all warm ups, warm downs, time spent pushing with a puncture, uphill, downhill, into and with the wind. It includes solo time and drafting time and everything else you can think of. So from now on my official and totally correct answer to someone asking what my average speed is on a ride is........15 mph s£$t I'm slow |
Originally Posted by JaceK
(Post 10564470)
with only 800 miles of riding you really are not going to see a dramatic improvement... somethings take work, 800 miles is couple of weeks worth of work... how much can you improve in that time?
With that said, my rides average between 14 mph (recovery) to 24 mph (races and fast group rides) |
What most of you can't appreciate is that, unlike the small minority that rule this place, many of us just ride. So for most of us, we can pull an average speed out of our asses that basically describes our riding ability.
God I don't miss this place.... |
While I did state my average speed, you'll note I also had said I didn't really care what it was. It was neat to know that on that ride I was faster than I usually am, but I don't go for a particular speed other than moving. I just go out and ride, sometimes for a specific distance, but mostly to just go out and have fun. Unless you're actually racing, or training for a race, it doesn't really matter. It just helps to gauge whether you'll be able to keep up with a certain group.
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Originally Posted by Tulex
(Post 10573078)
God I don't miss this place....
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Originally Posted by Tulex
(Post 10573078)
God I don't miss this place....
At the very least its ironic. And if you don't miss this place, will you check back to see if anyone responded? If not then you might miss it. |
Originally Posted by umd
(Post 10567201)
orly
Originally Posted by Brian Ratliff
(Post 10567280)
No, actually, he is quite right on this one.
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Originally Posted by botto
(Post 10567294)
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...tefacepalm.gifhttp://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...9103defb8d.gifhttp://img.photobucket.com/albums/v2...rffacepalm.gif..
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honestly... usual ride flat, not much wind.. 21.5-22.5
normal ride by myself w/ around 2000ft gain/loss 19-20mph slow ride with friends 17.5-19.0 fast group ride with stop signs, lights etc... 23-27mph 10mile tt 24.5mph 56miles (triathlon) 22.4mph (70.3 Vineman) |
Originally Posted by Cat4Lifer
(Post 10584864)
Rly.
Nah, he isn't. Edit: not counting time trials. |
My average varies widely depending on if it is early in the season or late in the season. In KS, I don't do much of anything in the winter and my fitness drops dramatically so when I get back on the bike in the spring, I am slow (avg around 16-17mph solo on a 40 mile ride). Additionally, I am a pilot and am away from home for around 20 days out of the month so I can't ride at all during that time. That said, by the end of the summer I am up to around 19-20mph avg on the same solo rides and 21-23mph on a 30mph group ride over similar rolling Kansas terrain. What does this mean? I guess it really means nothing. I enjoy seeing improvement but my job combined with my Raynaud's Disease in the winter just doesn't allow for me to focus the time on riding that I'd like to. I think I could be substantially faster and more consistent under different conditions but that's just not the way it is. The most important part about this whole thing is I absolutely effing LOVE being on my bike. I look forward to it so much when I'm out flying a trip. Just get out on your bike, enjoy what you're doing, and if you have the time and energy to commit to being on the bike, you will get faster.
Edit: By the way, whoever said umd is showing off needs to calm down. I enjoy looking at other people's numbers and his info was actually useful. In fact, most of the time umd posts useful info. Seems like people get pissed at him almost as much as they do with botto. I don't get it. |
Originally Posted by Copperhed51
(Post 10587626)
Edit: By the way, whoever said umd is showing off needs to calm down. I enjoy looking at other people's numbers and his info was actually useful. In fact, most of the time umd posts useful info. Seems like people get pissed at him almost as much as they do with botto. I don't get it.
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People who spout off a bunch of baloney don't like getting called on it. Rather than admit they don't have a leg to stand on, they would prefer to cast aspersions on the messenger of their indictment.
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Originally Posted by umd
(Post 10587120)
Yes, I am. Prove me wrong.
That's like someone saying: "The goal of a pole is to stand erect. Don't agree? Prove me wrong." If you wanna go on thinking a race has a goal, go ahead, but you're wrong. |
Originally Posted by Cat4Lifer
(Post 10588879)
lol
That's like someone saying: "The goal of a pole is to stand erect. Don't agree? Prove me wrong." If you wanna go on thinking a race has a goal, go ahead, but you're wrong. You take bikeforums stupidity to an absurd new level. Saying that "the goal of a race is cross the finish line first" is not the same thing as saying that the race is an entity that pursues it's own goals. |
Originally Posted by Jive Turkey
(Post 10566482)
You're not average, you're above average and seem to love posting numbers so people on here can tell you how good you are.
We all know you're good. You're much better than I can ever dream of being. And if you bother to do some search on the Internet then you will find out that UMD IS AVERAGE. It will be very hard for him to impress other racers. So the guy is being pretty honest about himself. |
Originally Posted by umd
(Post 10566906)
Some people aren't comfortable going fast downhill, and brake heavily.
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There are so many average speed threads, but people still come back to reply to every new one. Interesting.
OP, i asked kinda the same question you asked and I was ridiculed as well. I still learned something though. Average speed should be exclusive and personal to the route that you ride. If you really want to see how you're doing, ask someone who does the same exact route that you do, what their avg speed is. And then, you ride that route, and compare it. Ride a little more, then do that route and see if you improve. That's what i've been doing lately and i have seen improvement. I have a 40 Mile Route which i usually average 16 mph. There's a lot of hills and wind is common where i live, so i don't expect my avg speed to be as high as 19 or 20. But i still think 17 or 18 is possible. Best of Luck to You. |
Originally Posted by 7bmwm3gtr
(Post 10590028)
There are so many average speed threads, but people still come back to reply to every new one. Interesting.
OP, i asked kinda the same question you asked and I was ridiculed as well. I still learned something though. Every time an average speed thread comes up, the poster needs to be taught that it has little use as a metric for comparison to others. |
Originally Posted by umd
(Post 10590061)
Your mistake is thinking that being told you are thinking about it wrong is being ridiculed. You learned something, so the "ridicule" was apparently informative, no?
Every time an average speed thread comes up, the poster needs to be taught that it has little use as a metric for comparison to others. |
Originally Posted by 7bmwm3gtr
(Post 10590067)
Some replies were informative, and some weren't.
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