Ranger's training thread

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.
ben990
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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by ben990 » March 8th, 2011, 10:29 am

Byron Drachman wrote:
Ranger wrote: I've got the video of my 500, 1:34 @ 32 spm (13 SPI, 10 MPS). So, now I am just waiting on macroth's. After he posts his video and we have time to examine it closely and discuss it thoroughly, as he likes to do, I'll post mine.
I believe that. That's wonderful news. It proves that your training has been a huge success. Inspired by your example, I just ran a sub four minute mile. It was with a steady heart rate of 155. I'll show the video of my mile run as soon as you post your video of your 500m row.
:lol: Congrats, Byron! You now run well!
Rich Cureton M 60 hwt 5'11" 180 lbs. 7:02.3 (lwt) 2K

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by macroth » March 8th, 2011, 10:31 am

ranger wrote:BTW, in my distance rowing, I now like to do what I call "sweep-stroking,"
Now, meaning since last August or September. Or did you set aside the "sweep stroking" at some point in the last 6 months?
43/m/183cm/HW
All time PBs: 100m 14.0 | 500m 1:18.1 | 1k 2:55.7 | 2k 6:15.4 | 5k 16:59.3 | 6k 20:46.5 | 10k 35:46.0
40+ PBs: 100m 14.7 | 500m 1:20.5 | 1k 2:59.6 | 2k 6:21.9 | 5k 17:29.6 | HM 1:19:33.1| FM 2:51:58.5 | 100k 7:35:09 | 24h 250,706m

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by ranger » March 8th, 2011, 10:32 am

PaulH wrote:But yes, it is less efficient. This isn't a matter of opinion, but physics. The less even your pace is for a given speed, the more energy you must produce overall.
From stroke to stroke?

Even if you are pulling even splits, let's say, over each five or ten strokes?

Yikes.

I don't think there is any evidence for this at all.

The body is not a motor.

Neither is the mind.

Both are complex systems that arrive at effective and efficient performance in all sorts of non-mechanistic ways.

ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by ranger » March 8th, 2011, 10:34 am

macroth wrote:
ranger wrote:BTW, in my distance rowing, I now like to do what I call "sweep-stroking,"
Now, meaning since last August or September. Or did you set aside the "sweep stroking" at some point in the last 6 months?
No, I have been doing it for quite a while, but even so, for only about six months out of the ten years that I have been erging.

If you row at a low drag, length, together with quickness, is crucial.

So any way that you can devise to get more productive length and quickness is a boon.

Rowing at low drag is also relatively new for me.

I have only been rowing consistently at low drag (119 df.) for six months or so out of the ten years I have been erging, too.

ranger
Last edited by ranger on March 8th, 2011, 10:37 am, edited 1 time in total.
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by hjs » March 8th, 2011, 10:36 am

ranger wrote:
PaulH wrote:But yes, it is less efficient. This isn't a matter of opinion, but physics. The less even your pace is for a given speed, the more energy you must produce overall.
From stroke to stroke?

Even if you are pulling even splits, let's say, over each five or ten strokes?

ranger
Yes, output look wise yes, input wise, it differs, here comes technique, efficiency and habitation in play.
:wink:

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by ranger » March 8th, 2011, 10:39 am

hjs wrote:Yes, output look wise yes, input wise, it differs, here comes technique, efficiency and habitation in play.
Sorry, this is word salad.

It has no syntax.

Say what?

ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by hjs » March 8th, 2011, 10:41 am

ranger wrote:
hjs wrote:Yes, output look wise yes, input wise, it differs, here comes technique, efficiency and habitation in play.
Sorry, this is word salad.

It has no syntax.

Say what?

ranger
read it slowly, word for word :wink: Maybe the click will come, maybe :P

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by ranger » March 8th, 2011, 10:43 am

Sweep-stroking also encourages me to relax my shoulders at the catch, just what someone like Mike VB is not doing very well.

When you rotate your body in a sweep-rowing motion, you extend one shoulder further than the other, and to get this extension, you need to relax your lats, delts, etc.

The nature of the gesture forces you to do it.

If you sweep-stroke, you _can't_ _not_ do it.

So it corrects the fault in technique--automatically.

I also find that the extra length and more precise timing of muscle contractions that you get in sweep-rowing then tends to transfer if you row right down the middle, as though you were sculling.

ranger
Last edited by ranger on March 8th, 2011, 10:47 am, edited 1 time in total.
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by ranger » March 8th, 2011, 10:46 am

hjs wrote: read it slowly, word for word :wink: Maybe the click will come, maybe :P
Language has syntax.

It isn't put together word by word.

ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by hjs » March 8th, 2011, 10:50 am

ranger wrote:
hjs wrote: read it slowly, word for word :wink: Maybe the click will come, maybe :P
Language has syntax.

It isn't put together word by word.

ranger
it's about getting info from one to another. In this case you show that it's impossible in any way for 8 years now. :lol: , you simply are always wrong. Even when you try hard not to be.

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by ranger » March 8th, 2011, 10:51 am

PaulH wrote:But yes, it is less efficient. This isn't a matter of opinion, but physics.
Human efficiency and effectiveness isn't a matter of physics.

We are primarily biological, psychological, social, and aesthetic creatures, especially when it comes to effective and efficient performance.

We are only peripherally physical.

ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by ranger » March 8th, 2011, 10:55 am

hjs wrote:it's about getting info from one to another
Initially, at least, the info that is needed to make the point about the maximal efficiency of perfectly regular stroking is a video of a PM4 with someone, anyone, just stroking naturally, doing a race pace 500m @ 10MPS, with flat splits across, say, each 100m, and across the 500m as a whole, but with strokes, as they come one after another, that don't vary a couple of spms or seconds per 500m, perhaps don't vary at all, with the monitor on the force curve, and with heart rate included.

Why?

Because if it turns out that no one at all rows this way, it might be pretty hard to claim that this is the most efficient way to row.

If it is the most efficient way to row, why does no one do it?

ranger
Last edited by ranger on March 8th, 2011, 10:59 am, edited 3 times in total.
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by hjs » March 8th, 2011, 10:56 am

ranger wrote:
hjs wrote:it's about getting info from one to another
The info that is needed make the point about the efficiency of perfectly regular stroking is a video of a PM4 with someone, anyone, just stroking naturally, doing a race pace 500m @ 10MPS, with strokes that don't vary a couple of spms or seconds per 500m, perhaps don't vary at all, with the monitor on the force curve, and with heart rate included.

ranger
I hope you hold your breath for this :lol:

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by macroth » March 8th, 2011, 10:57 am

ranger wrote:
hjs wrote: read it slowly, word for word :wink: Maybe the click will come, maybe :P
Language has syntax.

It isn't put together word by word.

ranger
On the other hand, intelligent human beings can derive meaning from imperfect declarations. For example, when an English professor consistently misspells or misuses certain words, his audience can still get the general gist of what he meant to say. There are a few examples in this thread.

In this case, someone who isn't completely obtuse would interpret hjs's post as follows:

"Yes, output look wise yes, input wise, it differs, here comes technique, efficiency and habitation in play."
"Yes, the output may look the same, but the input differs: technique, efficiency and habituation come into play."
43/m/183cm/HW
All time PBs: 100m 14.0 | 500m 1:18.1 | 1k 2:55.7 | 2k 6:15.4 | 5k 16:59.3 | 6k 20:46.5 | 10k 35:46.0
40+ PBs: 100m 14.7 | 500m 1:20.5 | 1k 2:59.6 | 2k 6:21.9 | 5k 17:29.6 | HM 1:19:33.1| FM 2:51:58.5 | 100k 7:35:09 | 24h 250,706m

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Re: Ranger's training thread

Post by PaulH » March 8th, 2011, 11:03 am

ranger wrote:
PaulH wrote:But yes, it is less efficient. This isn't a matter of opinion, but physics. The less even your pace is for a given speed, the more energy you must produce overall.
From stroke to stroke?

Even if you are pulling even splits, let's say, over each five or ten strokes?

Yikes.

I don't think there is any evidence for this at all.
And yet there is definitive proof, as I think macroth pointed out earlier. But let me simplify the math to help you. Assume that rowing at 2 m/s takes 100 Watts (yes I know, why would you row at 100 Watts? It's just an illustration). Rather than rowing at 2 m/s, you could cover the same distance in the same time by rowing half the time at 1 m/s and half at 3 m/s. And finally, assume that rowing at 1 m/s takes 50 Watts, while rowing at 3 m/s takes 200 Watts. Can you see that by rowing with this greater variety you're going to use an average of 125 Watts, rather than 100 Watts?

Now, as hjs says, how you generate those Watts can vary from stroke to stroke to suit you, and it's trivially true that how you generate them *will* change through the course of a piece. Nonetheless, if you vary the pace you're going to have to output more Watts then if you keep an even pace.
ranger wrote: We are only peripherally physical.
If you're a dualist, perhaps. But if I take away your body I guarantee you'll row very poorly.

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