Looking for a new trainer to keep my winter training interesting.
#26
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Its expensive but I love the Kurt Kinetic rock and roll . The fluid unit is mounted on rubber bushings giving a more lifelike ride with motion. Makes it far easier to ride for long times when inclimate.
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Tried everything to make it not squeak, it's really getting to me now.
#28
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A Rock and Roll won't really work for me. I don't train on any of my road bikes, I have a cut up old Schwinn I train on. I made the geometry the same as my road bikes, but there is no fork anymore.
That Lemond thing looks cool. Kinda like a low-tech velotron.
That Lemond thing looks cool. Kinda like a low-tech velotron.
#29
Uber Goober
When we lived in Colorado, I would hike in a county park. There were mountain bikers all over the place. The first time it snowed a half-inch, it didn't matter how pretty the weather was after that, you didn't see another bike. But now, I get on here and other websites, and I read about people riding all winter up there. So I think a lot of the riding-outside issue is mental rather than physical. Anyway, I was hiking all summer up there, and in the winter, I hiked and snowshoed, and there were very few days when you couldn't do something outside. IF you wanted to.
It gets dark down here in the wintertime, too, and I just ordered me a new headlight. If I was in snowier areas, I'd be looking at a Puggsly. Those things are cool, and I'd rather go crunching through the snow at 8 mph than sit in a house spinning the pedals for 6 months.
It gets dark down here in the wintertime, too, and I just ordered me a new headlight. If I was in snowier areas, I'd be looking at a Puggsly. Those things are cool, and I'd rather go crunching through the snow at 8 mph than sit in a house spinning the pedals for 6 months.
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#30
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I'm going to ride outside as long as I can. I rode on New Years day last year, and there was still a foot or so of snow, and it was -20. It sucked pretty bad on my old Schwinn. The big problem is the daylight as I said before. Lights are cool, and all, but lets be honest it is allot more dangerous to ride at night, then ride in your basement. That's my big thing. That, and I want to take my training to the next level, and my Cat2 friend tells me I need 3-4 days a week 5-6hrs on the bike, just for base. That's allot of time riding at night, exposing yourself to danger.
#31
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I just ordered a KK Road Machine from my LBS. Next I'll pickup a powertap. I can't wait to try my new trainer, and see if it is as good as all the bike weenies on the internet say it is. I'll be picking up the extra heavy flywheel from ebay soon too.
#34
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That's the most counterproductive advise I've ever been presented with thanks.
Last edited by Soloist Assassin; 09-28-10 at 05:20 AM.
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Why not go with a speed/cad sensor, heart rate monitor for your Garmin 500 with WKO+ instead of a wired powertap wheel? Seems like that combined with the KK chart would pretty much give you a good deal of info for less $. I guess the heavier flywheel might throw that chart off? Why get the heavier flywheel anyway?
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Also, if you're going to be riding indoors so much, why not ditch the schwinn and get some cheap aluminum bike with better geometry to use on the trainer?
#37
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Why not go with a speed/cad sensor, heart rate monitor for your Garmin 500 with WKO+ instead of a wired powertap wheel? Seems like that combined with the KK chart would pretty much give you a good deal of info for less $. I guess the heavier flywheel might throw that chart off? Why get the heavier flywheel anyway?
Make your Road Machine or Rock and Roll the most versitile trainer you can find with the addition of a Pro Flywheel. The Pro Flywheel is perfect for hardcore endurance workouts, like tempo and long slow distance rides. Plus, with a cost down time of 60 seconds and a slower accelleration you will notice an increased realism and a more "Road Like Feel".
That's sounds exactly like what I want for the long base miles days. If I get it, and I like it w/o I won't bother, and save the extra money for the PT, but I am skeptical. Lots of people buy it and like it.
I have more road bikes. I use the Schwinn to keep wear and tear off of the real road bikes. Plus I cut the fork off to save space, and when I train I set the bottom of the drops on top of my bar of my weight bench to support it. It works quite well. The geometry is the same as my road bikes anyway. I cut, and welded the seatpost, and made it laid back to match the geometry. Not to mention it is old, and simple. The BB has standard ball bearings, that are easily serviceable. Did I mention I got it for free too. It will be getting a new saddle now this winter. Specialized came out with a new Carbon Toupe, so my current one on my Cervelo that I love will become part of the trainer rig.
#38
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#39
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Welcome to page 1.
#40
shedding fat
I'm going to ride outside as long as I can. I rode on New Years day last year, and there was still a foot or so of snow, and it was -20. It sucked pretty bad on my old Schwinn. The big problem is the daylight as I said before. Lights are cool, and all, but lets be honest it is allot more dangerous to ride at night, then ride in your basement. That's my big thing. That, and I want to take my training to the next level, and my Cat2 friend tells me I need 3-4 days a week 5-6hrs on the bike, just for base. That's allot of time riding at night, exposing yourself to danger.
I live in south FL, and I have been doing quite a bit of climbing since the sumer thanks to some trips I have taken. Now, I don't want to loose the base of riding mountains in addition to the fact that I found it "fun". I have refused to buy a trainer given that the only weather I won't ride in here is hurricane force wind and torrential rain. Quite frankly, the only benefit this freaking state has is the weather. In any case, I am very seriously considering to get a Tacx Fortius and a few of the mountain DVD to use regularly in the garage 1-2/week. More if I am gearing up to do some ride that involves climbing. The LeMond trainer above seems like a good alternative, but I've used trainers before and it was extremely painful to sit in one for more than 45 min. At least the Fortius has an interactive part to it that hopefully will keep you motivated. Is it expensive? Sure, it is. Is it worth it? Only you can answer that as it is your money ultimately.
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#41
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one thing you can do besides jsut riding a trainer is alot of running, i've noticed that if i run all winter i start in the spring with a really strong base, and i need to run anways so it just saves me time hahaha (i wrestle so i need to consistantly lose 15 pounds and still have strong aerobic strength and like weight lifting strength. seriusly i view losing weight in the summer as off season, 5 pounds is nothing for a climbing race)
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You're nuts.
Daylight really disappears over fall/winter....just this morning, I realized that I couldn't really get rolling (I have wimpy lights) until around 8:00.
Correctamundo.
Correctamundo.
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#43
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Is it more dangerous to ride outside than in your basement? Sure!! I have to tell you though, I got lights 2+ years ago, and have not looked back since. Streets are much quieter, far less traffic (lucky if I see 4-5 cars in 2 hr rides), and I can see and hear every car coming in any direction from pretty far, which is something I cannot do during the day. Most people that have never ridden at night say the same thing you just said until they do it themselves for a bit. There is a learning curve and a comfort curve too, but you get used to it very easily. The worst part is getting up , and getting used to going to bed early to be able to get up consistently.
I live in south FL, and I have been doing quite a bit of climbing since the sumer thanks to some trips I have taken. Now, I don't want to loose the base of riding mountains in addition to the fact that I found it "fun". I have refused to buy a trainer given that the only weather I won't ride in here is hurricane force wind and torrential rain. Quite frankly, the only benefit this freaking state has is the weather. In any case, I am very seriously considering to get a Tacx Fortius and a few of the mountain DVD to use regularly in the garage 1-2/week. More if I am gearing up to do some ride that involves climbing. The LeMond trainer above seems like a good alternative, but I've used trainers before and it was extremely painful to sit in one for more than 45 min. At least the Fortius has an interactive part to it that hopefully will keep you motivated. Is it expensive? Sure, it is. Is it worth it? Only you can answer that as it is your money ultimately.
I live in south FL, and I have been doing quite a bit of climbing since the sumer thanks to some trips I have taken. Now, I don't want to loose the base of riding mountains in addition to the fact that I found it "fun". I have refused to buy a trainer given that the only weather I won't ride in here is hurricane force wind and torrential rain. Quite frankly, the only benefit this freaking state has is the weather. In any case, I am very seriously considering to get a Tacx Fortius and a few of the mountain DVD to use regularly in the garage 1-2/week. More if I am gearing up to do some ride that involves climbing. The LeMond trainer above seems like a good alternative, but I've used trainers before and it was extremely painful to sit in one for more than 45 min. At least the Fortius has an interactive part to it that hopefully will keep you motivated. Is it expensive? Sure, it is. Is it worth it? Only you can answer that as it is your money ultimately.
As for you pondering the TACX Fortius. I went to the local YMCA with a friend the other day. They had several different types of exercise bikes there. Including a recumbent VR setup that looked similar to the TACX screen shots. In all honesty it was a gadget, and a poor one at that. The best thing I found about it was the power meter that was built in. Which I will have once I get the PT. While it would be cool for a few times a week hard efforts trying to beat a particular record time on a course. I couldn't see it entertaining me for several hours a day doing base miles. I would say save your money, and buy a KK and a Spinervals Hillacious DVD.
Thanks MM, some of these guys have no idea what winter in Ohio is like it seems.