Post
by Cyclingman1 » November 2nd, 2014, 7:51 am
The word "soft" is getting to me a little bit. Doing rowing pieces of 2K on up is about total fitness and total energy expenditure. I'm sure that the OP doing 9.0W/stroke at 30 SPM did not feel "soft" doing it. I'm sure he was breathing hard and pointing to the end. Lance Armstrong won 7 tours [ignoring the drugs] by using low gears and high cadence. Of course, he had to be very fit to do that. But those using higher gears at lower cadance could not match him.
I'm sure the OP can do 12 W/s, but for how long and at what SPM? I gurantee that he cannot do 1:49.2 for 5K at 12W/s. His SPM would have to slow considerably. It takes too much rest to maintain 12 W/s. Of course, younger, very fit ergers can do 12W/s at 30 SPM. However, out of nearly 5000 ranked 5K rowers, there are 5 who can do 360 Watts for 5K.
OTW rowing is different than erging. It takes time to pull the oars thru the water on a full stroke. 18-20 SPM is quite reasonable for OTW rowing. I'm sure at 30 SPM on up OTW that some compromises have to be made on stroke length. But the erg is different. A full stroke length at 30 SPM is not hard to accomplish. But one does have to have the fitness to recover fast enough to start a pull every 2 seconds. And force on the handle is important. If one muscles up to pull 12 W/s and on up, chances are the average good erger cannot recover to do 30 SPM. One subconsciously or consciously picks a force that is sustainable for 30 SPM or other SPM. It is a tradeoff: force on handle vs. SPM. As I said before, given one's current strength and fitness, if one parameter is increased the other has to decrease. That is what training is all about: the ability to have a higher level in one of the parameters at the same level in the other. In the case of the OP, perhaps he can gain the strength to do 10W/s at 30 SPM. That puts him right at 1:45 or 17:30 for 5K. Of course the combinations are many: 11 x 27, 12 x 25, 9 x 33, etc, etc. A person will do what his strength and fitness dictates. In the case of the OP, for now, that is 9 x 30 = 270 Watts or 1:49.2.
JimG, Gainesville, Ga, 79, 76", 205lb. PBs:
65-69: .5,1,2,5,6,10K: 1:30.8 3:14.1 6:40.7 17:34.0 21:18.1 36:21.7 30;60;HM: 8337 16237 1:20:25
70-79: .5,1,2,5,6,10K: 1:32.7 3:19.5 6:58.1 17:55.3 21:32.6 36:41.9 30;60;HM: 8214 15353 1:23:02.5