Not really. When you push yourself (or a weight) up, the work you do goes into potential energy for the weight you pushed up.
When you let the weight drop, the potential energy becomes kinetic energy (and you have to use your muscles if you want to prevent the weight hitting the floor). If the weight is tied to the wheel, its drop will lead to work done on the wheel, going into the Erg.
Yes, but the SKiErg already measures this for you. Why would you want to measure it again and differently ?gvcormac wrote: ↑January 16th, 2024, 5:13 pmNow pull on the SkiErg handles when lowering. Some of the energy that would otherwise be wasted will be transferred to the SkiErg. You can measure the amount by how much your apparent weight is decreased when you pull on the SkiErg. It gets a bit more complicated than that because work is force times distance, so you need to figure out how far up and down you are moving. But it would be a start.
The difference between your "apparent" weight and your usual weight (mass) is simply the force you're applying to the handles times gravity.gvcormac wrote: ↑January 16th, 2024, 5:13 pmSo long as your apparent weight is greater than zero (or maybe greater than the weight of the non-moving part of your body) you are wasting some of your lift. The goal is to minimize your apparent weight during the stroke, so as to maximize energy transfer to the machine.
As said, the PM5 basically measures this already.
Quantifying waste (energy you spend that doesn't go into the Erg) is very difficult, but essentially you have friction (bearings etc), the bungee (for SkiErg and RowErg, due to hysteresis) and then all the energy you spend to accelerate/decelerate the different parts of your body.gvcormac wrote: ↑January 16th, 2024, 5:13 pmThe RowErg also involves waste energy, but its on the horizontal plane, so not as large -- just the kinetic energy you develop in recovery, not energy from lifting a heavy weight (you). If I recall correctly, studies have shown this waste to be between 10% and 20%.
The BikeErg has the least waste of all. A bit from the recipricating weight of one shin and 1/2 thigh at a time.
Notice however than in the SkiErg case when you lift the heels and then hang from the handles, you let your weight do some work for you: the work done by your weight is essentially the work you have done when lifting the heels (lifting your weight). Waste is minimal for that and is likely more than compensated by the fact that you're offloading some work to your quads and calves instead of using only your arms.
Probably that's also why on-the-snow skiers also clearly bend the knees and hinge when double-poling: overall it's better.