Can someone give me some info on the "Force Curve" screen on the C2?
How can it be used to improve somone's indoor rowing?
Thanks
Rich
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Actually, no. Higher amplitude (e.g. a tall, 'spikey' curve) is not necessarily better. Total area under the curve is what directly affects pace. In general height plus breadth trumps height alone or breadth alone.maritato1 wrote:John
So the main goal is to create a high curve. I imagine you cant do too much to make the curve longer. Thanks for your response
Rich
Jon, doesn't the shape of the curve depend on the rower's physical characteristics to some extent? As a 5'7.5" lightweight (rather than a 6'6" heavyweight powerhouse) I can't get anywhere near your force curves - mine tends to be much more like a sawtooth.NavigationHazard wrote: Actually, no. Higher amplitude (e.g. a tall, 'spikey' curve) is not necessarily better. Total area under the curve is what directly affects pace. In general height plus breadth trumps height alone or breadth alone.
Are you somehow built very differently than a "regular" human being?Citroen wrote:Jon, doesn't the shape of the curve depend on the rower's physical characteristics to some extent? As a 5'7.5" lightweight (rather than a 6'6" heavyweight powerhouse) I can't get anywhere near your force curves - mine tends to be much more like a sawtooth.NavigationHazard wrote: Actually, no. Higher amplitude (e.g. a tall, 'spikey' curve) is not necessarily better. Total area under the curve is what directly affects pace. In general height plus breadth trumps height alone or breadth alone.
Citroen wrote: mine tends to be much more like a sawtooth.
Yes, both of the graphs are from rowperfect sites.NavigationHazard wrote:The last graph was generated by Marjolein Rekers, a Dutch master's rower who is the daughter of Casper Rekers (the inventor of RowPerfect). I don't know where JR got it, but it originally comes from RowPefect and really does date from 1998. It's one of several sample/representative force curves they provide.