Allan Olesen wrote: ↑December 17th, 2018, 2:51 pm
Regarding the handle pulling you back to the catch position: That will probably not happen.
What
should happen when you row strapless is:
- You start by making a firm drive with your legs, and then continue by bending a bit backwards in the hip.
- Now your whole body is travelling backwards on the rail. You have spent quite a lot of energy on accelerating your body to that velocity.
- If you now start braking by pulling with your feet, all that energy is just wasted.
- If you instead start braking by pulling with your arms, the braking force will go into the handle where it will count.
- When you reach the end of the drive, the seat should be at rest.
- And since the rail is sloped, you can just sit and wait for gravity to do its work so you end up in the catch position again.
One of the important parts of this exercise is the timing of your arms. You will need the entire movement range of your arms to brake your body. So if you have started bending your arms too early, you will not have enough arm movement left for braking, and you will end up on the floor behind the rower.
thank you very much for this!
my rowing technique pretty much consisted of:
- explode with the legs, back at 1 o'clock position,
- when legs are almost at full lockout, pull with back
- when back is almost at 11 o'clock pull with arms
- and finally bend legs using the straps to pull foward
couple of nuance questions:
the only time my arms are in lockout position is at the catch?
are my legs ever in lockout position at the end of the drive?
gooseflight wrote: ↑December 18th, 2018, 5:23 am
Don't try to take the bike analogy too far. It falls over fairly quickly.
On a bike there is a direct relationship between speed, cadence and gear size. This doesn't apply on the rower. On the rower you can row at any pace [speed] at any stroke rate [cadence] at any drag factor (DF) [not a gear].
The rower [ergometer] measures work and converts it to pace. ~300W is 1:45 pace/split. You can pull 1:45 at 22 spm on DF 120. You can pull 1:45 at 30 spm on DF180. It's the same amount of work.
On the mechanics of the stroke: no pause at the catch or at backstops. The action is continuous. No need for straps to get back up the slide. If there were, strapless rowing would be impossible. Just go through the phases: hands away, rock your torso over your hips and finally bend the knees. You arrive back at the catch quite naturally. You can only really control stroke rate on the recovery. Drive time doesn't vary that much.
due to my inexperience, the only metaphor i could think of when i first pulled on a damper setting of 1 vs. a 10 was a bike and it's gears.
i didnt even know that strapless rowing was a thing... TIL
jackarabit wrote: ↑December 18th, 2018, 3:53 am

Here’s the pace and power summary of John’s exemplary sub-3hr. FM:
Take a glance at average power. Divide power by John’s stated av. rate of 29/30 spm:
173/29=Stroke power index of 5.96 (round to 6.0)
173/30=spi of 5.76 (round to 5.8)
If the OP does John’s time with John’s average rate, he’ll need to improve his current stroke worth 4.4W to produce John’s 6W stroke. So, should he train his stroke power at 28-30 spm or at much lower rates from 18 to 22 spm? 18-22 is the conventional answer.
Why?
1) Places limits on physiological stress and encourages faster recovery and more training sessions. (Think high amplitude efforts performed at low frequency.)
2) Encourages the rower to concentrate on execution of a productive stroke rather than on maintenance of an ill-considered thrash.
Stroke power is the multiplicand and rate the multiplier. First order of business of training is to produce a powerful stroke. Maintaining base power at higher rates comes second. One may of course race any way one wishes.
maybe it's me but your post in a way contradicts what the below posters have said?
johnlvs2run wrote: ↑December 17th, 2018, 6:42 pm
Using an optimal stroke rate is very important for any race, especially a marathon.
I would not use a slow rating, but instead of that just use the rating that feels easiest and most comfortable.
Plus, for a marathon, a slow rate and/or high drag would burn your energy quickly, and a higher rating would help you conserve.
My first marathon, at age 56 and 143 pounds was 2:58, with a drag factor of 77, and 29 to 30 spm.
Dangerscouse wrote: ↑December 17th, 2018, 7:42 pm
I agree with John, a high rated FM isn't an issue if that feels comfortable. There's no 'one size fits all' in rowing and I have tried all sorts of speeds, drags and rates, it's too subjective to be prescriptive.
using numbers is a quantitative measure that can be easily compared to efficiency and power so to place some weight on the feels of comfort may produce quantitative numbers that do not seem efficient and powerful... obviously i could be wrong since i didnt do any math using John's numbers
is it possible to have a /500m time of 2:10 or below with a high s/m? that was my original mindset which after a few 5k sessions, i couldn't figure out why some low 20 s/m had a faster /500m lol i guess after looking at John's information provided by Jackrabbit... i guess the answer is yes?
for what it's worth, in addition to the numbers in my signature, i also go to the gym and perform powerlifting movements, bodybuilding style workouts, and started dabbing in weightlifting... not sure how much that information helps but it looks like it's mainly my technique that i need to refine.
i really appreciate the responses, and thank you all for being patience with my millions of questions!
34M, 200lbs, 3:50:00 Marathon, 1:38:00 half Marathon, 6:54:00 Ultra Marathon (all running times, not rowing) ... cant think of anything else to help about my stats when i ask questions or post