Leg Drive

General discussion on Training. How to get better on your erg, how to use your erg to get better at another sport, or anything else about improving your abilities.
Tsnor
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by Tsnor » November 4th, 2021, 3:58 pm

kini62 wrote:
November 1st, 2021, 4:23 pm
You're most likely sliding your butt (shooting the slide) and then pulling with your arms and back. Basically your legs are doing nothing. You need to practice just the leg drive. There are videos to help with that.
THIS. ^^

As you fix this watch the split time or watts or calories display. You will see a sudden performance improvement when you are stroking correctly and handle moves with seat. It won't be subtle.

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Citroen
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by Citroen » November 5th, 2021, 5:44 am

Tsnor wrote:
November 4th, 2021, 3:58 pm
kini62 wrote:
November 1st, 2021, 4:23 pm
You're most likely sliding your butt (shooting the slide) and then pulling with your arms and back. Basically your legs are doing nothing. You need to practice just the leg drive. There are videos to help with that.
THIS. ^^

As you fix this watch the split time or watts or calories display. You will see a sudden performance improvement when you are stroking correctly and handle moves with seat. It won't be subtle.
The best way to see if you're bum shoving is to look at the force curve. It needs to look like a left leaning hill with no kinks.

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https://www.concept2.com/indoor-rowers/ ... orce-curve
https://www.concept2.com/news/improving ... orce-curve

jvander76
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by jvander76 » November 9th, 2021, 1:07 pm

A late follow up: it may be that the problem was in the gym rower I was using. Now that I have a new row erg in my home, I can see the difference. I now have a sense of work being done on the leg drive. I also went from a setting if 7 on the damper to 4 with the same effect. I'm pretty sure that proper maintenance on the rower in my gym was lacking.

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Citroen
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by Citroen » November 9th, 2021, 1:21 pm

jvander76 wrote:
November 9th, 2021, 1:07 pm
I'm pretty sure that proper maintenance on the rower in my gym was lacking.
It was probably full of dust and cruft and the chain probably hadn't seen any oil since it left the factory, if my experience with badly maintained gym machines is anything to go by.

dabatey
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by dabatey » November 9th, 2021, 2:06 pm

I didn't really feel anything in my legs until I started to up the pace and pull a bit harder a few weeks in. I think also there's a perception thing where the tension in your core/hanging arms during the initial drive makes it 'feel' as if you aren't using the legs that much whereas actually you've pretty much got to be using the legs. Also, if you are pulling relatively lower power when starting then the need for initial leg drive speed probably isn't there quite as much.

So sometimes nothing to do with form, nor the rower maintenance, just a short wait until getting to the point where your fitness/mind lets you pull a bit harder and really kick into that leg drive a bit more. I think that's what it was for me anyway.

There's certainly a learning curve on the rower for knowing your limits and learning how to push harder, on top of getting the form correct. A lot different from the likes of running where half the work is done for you with one foot falling in front of the other; a bit more psychological, maybe why rowers tend to be free in gyms.
Age 52....Weight 61 Kg....
Row 26 Aug 21 to Mar 22. Cycle Mar 22 to Jun 24. Now mixing the 2.
2K 8.02.3 (23 Oct 21)...7.37.0(15 Mar 22)
5K 22.14 (2 Oct 21)
Resting HR 45 (was 48 in 2021)....Max HR (Seen) 182 [185 cycling]

mitchel674
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by mitchel674 » November 9th, 2021, 3:49 pm

This is a great example of why we constantly tell folks to check the drag factor on the PM and not just rely on where the damper handle is positioned. Highly likely that neglected gym machine was full of dust. Now with a clean, new machine, the OP is likely at reasonable drag factors for his workouts.
59yo male, 6ft, 153lbs

ukaserex
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by ukaserex » November 28th, 2021, 9:30 pm

jamesg wrote:
October 31st, 2021, 12:54 pm

In ergdata you can see peak and average force, stroke length and speed, which could help. Half your weight, 70% of height and speed 2m/s should be seen. As for technique, make sure your slide is not too far forward, keeping the knee angle open. The recovery sequence (arms, swing, slide) is critical.

Results depend of course on age, size and sex; 2W/kg will keep you fit.
Interesting metrics. How did you settle upon these values? (half your weight, 70% of height) And not sure what you're intending by speed 2m/s.

Can you elaborate?
100M - 16.1 1 Min - 370 500M - 1:25.1 1k - 3:10.2 4:00 - 1216 2k 6:37.0 5k 17:58.8 6k - 21:54.1 30 Min. - 8130 10k - 37:49.7 60:00 - 15604
1/2 Marathon 1:28:44.3 Marathon 2:59:36

5'10"
215 lbs
53 years old

jamesg
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by jamesg » November 29th, 2021, 1:45 am

Those are just numbers I used myself at age 60-65, for low rate training. I could then do a ½M within 90', which is 160W, weight around 80 kg. So fairly easy, but enough to get fit.

Ergdata shows speed among other numbers, and is the handle speed, average during the pull.
08-1940, 179cm, 83kg.

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jackarabit
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by jackarabit » November 29th, 2021, 2:10 am

ukaserex wrote:
November 28th, 2021, 9:30 pm
jamesg wrote:
October 31st, 2021, 12:54 pm

In ergdata you can see peak and average force, stroke length and speed, which could help. Half your weight, 70% of height and speed 2m/s should be seen. As for technique, make sure your slide is not too far forward, keeping the knee angle open. The recovery sequence (arms, swing, slide) is critical.

Results depend of course on age, size and sex; 2W/kg will keep you fit.
Interesting metrics. How did you settle upon these values? (half your weight, 70% of height) And not sure what you're intending by speed 2m/s.

Can you elaborate?
He customarily sez 2 watts per kilo of fit weight, ‘fit’ referencing the highest weight color coded ‘acceptable’ that you see on the BMI chart (indexed to your age on one axis and height on the other) immediately preceding the intersection with the next color block which screams overweight. So your fit weight is effectively your maximum ideal weight thence the 2 watts per kilo training power threshold for general fitness.

70% of height is often suggested as a ballpark estimate of drive length for most rowers. Half your weight? Speed 2m per stroke? Now see those two terms clarified. What a relief.
There are two types of people in this world: Those who can extrapolate from incomplete data

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jamesg
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by jamesg » November 29th, 2021, 5:51 am

Those numbers pan out as follows and seem to offer a good start:

At 180 height and 75 kg:

1.80*0.7 x 75/2 * 9.81 * 20/60 = 155 W; at rating 20.

155W/20spm = almost 8 Watt-minutes per stroke. The same stroke at rate 30 would give a 2k time 7:30.

Typically 155 W is aerobic so should give an increase in HR of about 155/2 = 77; plus Rest HR 60 = 137.

The overall heat rate corresponding to 155W is 4*155*0.86=533 kCal/h, considering 25% efficiency.
08-1940, 179cm, 83kg.

ukaserex
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by ukaserex » November 29th, 2021, 10:22 am

jamesg wrote:
November 29th, 2021, 5:51 am
Those numbers pan out as follows and seem to offer a good start:

At 180 height and 75 kg:

1.80*0.7 x 75/2 * 9.81 * 20/60 = 155 W; at rating 20.

155W/20spm = almost 8 Watt-minutes per stroke. The same stroke at rate 30 would give a 2k time 7:30.

Typically 155 W is aerobic so should give an increase in HR of about 155/2 = 77; plus Rest HR 60 = 137.

The overall heat rate corresponding to 155W is 4*155*0.86=533 kCal/h, considering 25% efficiency.
thanks for the clarification.

The Watt-minutes per stroke, I've seen identified within these forums as "work", and in some circles SPI, for "Stroke Power Index".
A couple years ago, when I was in peak condition, I'd seen my 2k effort give a tidy 10+ watts per stroke. Now, if I could have just hit 11, I might have gotten somewhere! Sadly, I think those days are behind me. Getting stronger past 50 years seems to be harder than I would have thought. Perhaps just more practice in eating clean and rowing smart!

Just looking at my last session, I see my stroke length is 1.27M. At just a smidge less than 5'10", the folks at Google give me a conversion to 177 cm.
So, 1.24 theoretical compared to 1.27 actual. Close enough, I'd guess.

Again, thanks for the clarification, I often find myself over-thinking on such things, but the numbers interest me, and often take my mind away from the discomfort of challenging rows.
100M - 16.1 1 Min - 370 500M - 1:25.1 1k - 3:10.2 4:00 - 1216 2k 6:37.0 5k 17:58.8 6k - 21:54.1 30 Min. - 8130 10k - 37:49.7 60:00 - 15604
1/2 Marathon 1:28:44.3 Marathon 2:59:36

5'10"
215 lbs
53 years old

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jackarabit
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by jackarabit » November 29th, 2021, 10:38 am

Now that’s granular! :wink: Gonna need to regrease my (brain) pan to catch the glint of understanding. :cry:
There are two types of people in this world: Those who can extrapolate from incomplete data

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Herryashley22
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by Herryashley22 » December 14th, 2021, 7:51 am

Thank you. I will have my own C2 rower in a couple weeks. So, finally, no more gym workouts! It will be nice to start fresh with a clean, properly functioning machine complete with my own PM5 to record data.

Herryashley22
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Re: Leg Drive

Post by Herryashley22 » December 15th, 2021, 2:49 am

thanks for the clarification.
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