Thanks guys. I really appreciate your quick responses! I feel sure the points you've each made are valid but I realise now that it would be more helpful if I expanded a bit on my own situation. My apologies for not doing so.
Thanks in particular to FB1 for taking into consideration the few details I provided in my profile. FB1 I've reduced the damping down from the top and found at values significantly lower than say 165 I can't get the same pace - seems I can't shorten the recovery time enough to compensate for the reduced resistance during the drive. Or maybe it's just that I can't up the speed of my drive to compensate for the lower resistance. I've got fairly short legs (according to my wife!) - my ROM along the monorail being about 50cm (just under 20 inches).
I realise most here see the erg as a means of developing/testing/maintaining "endurance" and that many of you race on the water - which I imagine to be far more demanding of technique, balance, tactics etc.
That's not me! I'm not a rower. I don't even consider myself an indoor rower. I've never rowed OTW, I'm not particularly interested in endurance but I find the erg is great for pushing the anaerobic threashold out and, to a lesser extend, for maintaining and supplementing strength training with weights. (I'm also a bit of a techno-freak and have a physics background so get turned on by the analytical nature of it all, courtesy of the PM3 data ... more than just another electronic toy!)
James, you seem to be equating CV training with endurance training, whereas I see training for endurance as just one aspect of it. Sprinting undoubtedly develops and places demands on the cardio vascular system.
I do a mix of activites but, as said earlier, biased towards the strength/short-distance ones:
My "CV training" is a mix of sprinting, Tabata intervals, 20-min HIIT sessions and the occasional 2K and 5K on the erg. (I've even been known to erg 10K+, but the thought of sliding back and forth in the same location for a half or full marathon leaves me cold; but I guess the thought of doing pullups with 20kg weights hanging off your waist might leave others cold! Each to their own
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
) I'm a somewhat infrequent "fine weather" road cyclist (commuting about 40km to work and back) and I've been in a couple of 160-km cycle races in the last couple of years. Once or twice a year there's nothing I enjoy more than spending maybe 10 days hiking/climbing in rugged mountainous country.
I haven't inherited the best genes for endurance events as I have circulatory problems and I "run" like a turtle with three legs. I'm too short in the leg and too light to have ever been a competitive rower. As my pseudonym suggests I've had to work very hard to build and maintain what muscle mass I have.
I guess I'm really interested in the fact that my optimum DF seems to be quite a bit higher than the figures I've seen bandied around - even for 500m sprints, and I wondered why this should be so.
Maybe I've answered my own question! But if there is anyone else with a similar background to me it would be great to hear your views.
Once again - really appreciate everyone's comments.