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So based on that, an estimate of your current FTP is 255W. If you're training based on an FTP of 280, it's set a good 10% too high. That is a very substantial difference that you would notice when doing aerobic length interval workouts (especially sweet spot/threshold with repeats), because it essentially puts your target power a full zone too high.
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I think 255 might be a bit high for a few reasons. First, that 20 min interval is right at the beginning of the ride - meaning the rider's full anaerobic capacity can be used to generate power. I also see a dip in HR towards the end, implying a drop off in power generation, although it's hard to tell from a screen cap from Garmin's site as there's not enough detail. Terrain and/or traffic could have been an issue, but that HR dip does imply that the early parts of the interval were overdone. Third, outside of the final burst, power levels look like they trend downward over the course of the interval.
All those are consistent with anaerobic power generation adding to aerobic power. But we're trying to measure purely aerobic power. I'd call it 245W if I had base it off just this one ride. But again, it's only one 20-minute interval. I've done FTP tests where I couldn't hold 90% of an FTP value that was known good for 10 minutes, much less 105% for 20. Some days just suck. |
Agreed. I think dunbar has a pretty good short-term anaerobic capacity (I think that's what Coggan is getting at with FRC in the next release of WKO+) and a relatively weaker aerobic capacity.
The test was also done on a pretty fair grade (11.2mph average speed) so he might have been more in the "climbing threshold" kind of range that some trainers reference -- low cadence above-threshold efforts that can be sustained for a fair bit. |
Yay!! Data! On my phone so it's hard to see what that curve says at an hour. 20min @255 corresponds to 242 FTP (95% of a 20 minute effort). Getting winded at 80-90% of FTP is what we've been saying. That would get you to the point where it's hard to talk as soon as you cross 190 and into the 200 range. That's normal.
Congrats. You have the same kind of anaerobic engine that I have. I believe that's what I called and one of my first posts. Assuming you can eventually get your weight into the 160 range you can be fairly competitive in cat 5 crits. |
For the record that qualifies as a gross over estimation. 40 points on 240. That comes out to 16%. Your training targets should be substantially changed. You will also see much better gains now.
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I also think 255 is probably a bit high. Take a look at the cumulative six weeks power curve. At 1 hr, Dunbar is right at 200 watts, substantially below the tested 255. That supports the theory that Dunbar has a good ability to use anaerobic power to maintain a higher power output over a shorter interval effort and helps explain why he is having trouble maintaining a conversation during what he describes as moderate efforts.
Also, and this needs to be said, FTP is nothing more than a point for individual measurement. I have a rather low FTP, but it has not held me back in racing. |
Originally Posted by svtmike
(Post 16591414)
Agreed. I think dunbar has a pretty good short-term anaerobic capacity (I think that's what Coggan is getting at with FRC in the next release of WKO+) and a relatively weaker aerobic capacity.
The test was also done on a pretty fair grade (11.2mph average speed) so he might have been more in the "climbing threshold" kind of range that some trainers reference -- low cadence above-threshold efforts that can be sustained for a fair bit. |
Originally Posted by topflightpro
(Post 16591900)
I also think 255 is probably a bit high. Take a look at the cumulative six weeks power curve. At 1 hr, Dunbar is right at 200 watts, substantially below the tested 255. That supports the theory that Dunbar has a good ability to use anaerobic power to maintain a higher power output over a shorter interval effort and helps explain why he is having trouble maintaining a conversation during what he describes as moderate efforts.
Also, and this needs to be said, FTP is nothing more than a point for individual measurement. I have a rather low FTP, but it has not held me back in racing. |
Originally Posted by Psimet2001
(Post 16591841)
Yay!! Data! On my phone so it's hard to see what that curve says at an hour. 20min @255 corresponds to 242 FTP (95% of a 20 minute effort).
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Originally Posted by achoo
(Post 16591931)
I just took a quick look at FRC. How is it different from AWC (anaerobic work capacity)? AWC has been in GoldenCheetah for quite a while now.
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Originally Posted by svtmike
(Post 16592453)
I know Coggan claims it is different, but I don't remember the details -- it's been a while since I watched the webinars discussing the next version of WKO+. Conceptually they seem very similar to me.
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Love how the whole conversation changed after 8 pages when the data finally came into play. Let this be a lesson to future posters to just open with the data from the get go.
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Originally Posted by Wesley36
(Post 16592541)
If you are interested, there is some discussion of FRC vs AWC over on the Wattage group (a Google group that Coggan is quite active on). There was also recently a big thread on the difference between FTP and CP60. FWIW, in both threads there is a mix of genuine intellectual discussion and unproductive name-calling, and no clear definitive answers.
The impression I got from all of the WKO4 webinars was that the WKO models are better and different mathematically (certainly a necessary assertion for a patent). But from a practical point of view, given the imprecision of the human machine and its day-to-day variation, I'm not sure there's a significant practical difference for most cyclists. I'm pretty sure there isn't for me. |
Originally Posted by topflightpro
(Post 16591900)
I also think 255 is probably a bit high. Take a look at the cumulative six weeks power curve. At 1 hr, Dunbar is right at 200 watts, substantially below the tested 255. That supports the theory that Dunbar has a good ability to use anaerobic power to maintain a higher power output over a shorter interval effort and helps explain why he is having trouble maintaining a conversation during what he describes as moderate efforts.
Also, and this needs to be said, FTP is nothing more than a point for individual measurement. I have a rather low FTP, but it has not held me back in racing. Agreed on the hour but he's said he doesn't have power data for serious rides over an hour in length so it's kinda what we got to go with. Dunbar - keep building the power files and populate that curve over time. It will help you identify a lot about your own psyiology and capability. |
Originally Posted by svtmike
(Post 16592620)
I haven't been on wattage in quite a while; I'll check it out.
The impression I got from all of the WKO4 webinars was that the WKO models are better and different mathematically (certainly a necessary assertion for a patent). But from a practical point of view, given the imprecision of the human machine and its day-to-day variation, I'm not sure there's a significant practical difference for most cyclists. I'm pretty sure there isn't for me. Would agree with your patent assertion and general conclusions for riders. |
Originally Posted by svtmike
(Post 16592448)
It was 20min @ 268, for an estimate of 255 (95%).
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Originally Posted by Dunbar
(Post 16573238)
I've been chatting with some fellow cyclists while out on my normal rides and who would've thought it could be so hard? I'll be cruising along at 60-70% of FTP, chatting away, and feel like I'm about to run out of breath if I talk too long. Is this a skill one needs to learn?
So fall comes around and I'd gotten all obsessed with riding and caught, then passed, his conditioning level. It helped that he went backwards due to getting sick, traveling, etc. So we did my hilly 50-mile route, that I'd been pounding every other day like clockwork for weeks, and about 3/4 up a particularly nasty wench of a hill, I'm fine but he's clearly suffering, and I said: so, tell me a story! It was, like, so cool. |
Getting better at pacing myself. Averaged 285w for 20 minutes up the same climb today. Started slightly under target power and didn't feel like I was dying half way up this time.
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Was looking forward to your update. Thanks for keeping the thread going.
Where is the climb, by the way? |
Originally Posted by f4rrest
(Post 16601882)
Where is the climb, by the way?
Here's a video of the climb (not my video.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2_wQniTxqoQ |
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