I think it does, but hopefully only in a very slight way. During the drive you are doing two things:John Foy wrote:Does the tension of the shock cord on an erg change the pace that a given effort will produce? I hope not. That would really mess things up in terms of racing.
1. Accelerating the flywheel.
2. Stretching the shock cord.
During recovery, the shock cord contracts, drawing the handle back in. The shock cord gets the energy to do that from step 2 above -- i.e. from you. It doesn't need much energy to do that, which is why I think it's not a big deal.
But imagine if there were twenty shock cords inside the C2. The recovery wouldn't be any different, except that possibly the handle would pull you back instead of you using your legs
But the drive would be much harder. Stretching out twenty shock cords takes a lot of work -- and that's work that's going into 2 above instead of 1. Hence the shock cord is robbing you of a small bit of performance. As I said, hopefully not much in the first place, and likely not enough to change much if one shock cord is a little different than another.
And in response to Citroen, remember that the C2 monitors the flywheel. Any energy that is used for 2 above is not available for 1, and the C2 is completely unaware of it.
Finally, consider a thought experiment: detach the chain from the flywheel altogether. Pull on the handle. Is it going to resist you? Yes -- the shock cord is going to resist you, and the C2 records nothing, because the flywheel isn't moving. Pile on another twenty, thirty shock cords and even Xeno would have a hard time pulling the handle for full strokes, but the C2 still records nothing.