Following excerpt from promotional material @ Concept2 blog of 30 April:
![Image](https://i.postimg.cc/kMF9byBr/9301-D4-B1-9-DBB-4-A8-C-B27-E-4-B0-D7649-E13-B.jpg)
Meters on the Bikeerg for a given wattage are 2x that of the Rowerg, and there is NO adjustment made for the difference between them. Thus someone riding at 2:00 pace for 40 minutes on the Bikeerg gets twice the meters of someone rowing at 2:00 pace on the Rowerg, i.e. 20,000 vs 10,000 meters, which is exactly how meters are added to Annual Meters Board. They should have made the meters the same instead of doubling them. The explanation of making the pace like the road is way off.The wattage required to go at a given pace per 500m on the indoor rower is the same wattage required to go at that pace per 1000m on the BikeErg. However, the “meters” traveled has been given a value that more closely simulates biking on the road, and has been pegged at 2X for the same power.
There was a good deal of interesting and heated debate before the present compromise was reached allowing a SkiErg team on the CTC. Underlying this was the assumption that a SkiErg team would never be competitive with the rowers at the top level. So far, this has been the case. If ever a SkiErg team became a real challenger, I suspect that the current arrangement would be examined again.CaseyClarke wrote: ↑May 10th, 2019, 2:23 pmI created a CTC BikeErg team about a year ago. You'll see it if you look in the drop down list when you register a new profile on the website. At the time I jokingly floated the idea of its inclusion in the CTC, knowing that it's my strongest piece of equipment and I would get near the top of the board for many of the longer distance challenges.
It does work in /1000m pace as opposed to the row & ski in /500m pace, so any distance challenges would need to be doubled on the BikeErg, and any timed challenges you'd need to halve your metres.
Tbh, I think including it would be unfair to the rowers. From what I've seen, the majority of people with at least a moderate amount of BE training are able to achieve faster paces than their equivalent on the rower. SkiErg is fine, as generally it's a much slower machine for 95% of people (compared with the rower) but the BikeErg would be faster for many.
You’re not alone there. 60 miles on a road bike is easily within the comfort zone of most weekend warriors. Not uncommon for sport tourists to ride 60-80 miles a day on supported camping or hotel tours. Even back to back centuries on a weekend are a lot more fun than 30 virtual miles on a RowErg (or on a mag trainer, Airdyne, or rollers for that matter).Personally, 100km on a bike seems a much easier task than a 50km erg.