happycamper515 wrote: ↑February 24th, 2020, 2:22 am
Peak force is one of the stats on the ergdata app. I'm guessing it's an absolute measurement so regardless of body type two people with similar peak force numbers should have similar 500m assuming both maintain those levels throughout the entire 500m.
This isn't that useful for comparing athletes, here are two examples why:
Example 1:
Consider two athletes, both with the same strength level, and the same height, but one has poor technique. They might have the same peak force (highest point on the y axis of the force curve) but the one with better technique goes further each stroke because he is better at applying a higher average force over the same time. His force curve would appear more rectangular while the one with poor technique would have a more triangular force curve.
Example 2:
Consider two athletes, one who is short and one who is tall, but both have very good technique and the same strength level.
They might have the same peak force and the same average force, and a similar looking force curve, but the taller one's drive length is much greater so the duration in time that the force is applied is longer. Therefore, that taller athlete would go further with each stroke. His force curve would be longer on the x axis even if it has the same average and peak force.
Watts is more useful for comparison because as a unit of power, it reflects the work performed (as force applied to the fan) over a unit of time. Pace and watts are different ways at looking at the same metric on these machines, pace is determined from watts. The ergometer estimates watts. From that estimate, it converts into pace.
pace = ³√(2.80/watts)
watts = 2.80/pace³
Stroke Power Index (SPI=Watts/SPM) would be more useful for comparison because it answers the question how powerful is one athlete versus another at the same stroke rate.
M36|5'8"/173CM|146lb/66KG|LWT|MHR 192|RHR 42|2020: 5K 18:52.9 (@1:53.2/500)|C2-D+Slides+EndureRow Seat+NSI Minicell Foam