So the answer you gave is best summarized as "using watts is too hard and nobody understands watts anyway"? If you want to be a thought leader on this topic then you would take times, convert to watts (to improve the accuracy), do the rankings (in watts) and convert back to time.John Rupp wrote:Jim Pisano asked this too and I have been meaning to answer.slalomskater wrote:Why do you choose time as your yardstick when power output in Watts would likely be a better comparision?
The primary reason is that time is easier to comprehend and to use.
Were watts to be used, then every time would need to be converted to watts, each of which would be more "time consuming" and also much more complicated than any of the calculations done now.
A second reason is that watts are not obviously connected with time. For example, if you row 230.1 watts for a 5k, no one would know what pace or time you did, unless they did a calculation to find out. However if you averaged 1:55 pace, then many would know that you did 19:10 for the 5k and visa versa.
Time is what is universally used. Cars measure speed in miles or kilometers per hour, not power output. The same for bicycle cyclometers, swimming, skiing, running. All of these show performance in time and not power.
So I have done the PERathlon the same way for these reasons.
By the way ... as an owner of a BAII calculator you can do this math. You could however do it much easier in Excel.
JimR