lostboy wrote: ↑September 29th, 2020, 8:57 pm
So after my lifting work out this morning I went on the rower for 6 mins this morning, set it so I could see the watts, reduced the flywheel to 2. Focused on my drive, watts went up to 140avg, noticed the difference. Still have to search more, learn more, but I see where I need to go, I'll get there. Thanks to you all for suggestions, truly a caring community.
That is a nice amount of watts.
The lever position should not be viewed like using a cable low row machine and setting the pin selector to a bigger weight.
Instead lever position influences how much wind resistance (drag factor) is on the flywheel. The lever position determines how open the flywheel cage is to air, the more air intake, the more drag. Lower drag factor will have a faster flywheel acceleration and a slower flywheel deceleration, higher drag factor will have a slower flywheel acceleration and a faster flywheel deceleration.
You should set the drag factor to an appropriate setting for your workout. For example, if you are doing long slow distance at a low stroke per minute (such as 20) you might want a drag factor from 100 to 130. If you are doing a distance time trial, possibly 120 to 140. If you are doing a 500M sprint at 45 strokes per minute, you may want it as high as 160. The reason to have a higher drag factor for intervals is to increase how quickly the flywheel decelerates so that it supports a higher stroke per minute rating. A reason to have it lower for steady state is to decrease the strain on the back and also to teach a fast, strong, snappy catch and drive. When rowing at very high Strokes Per Minute (SPM, aka rating), you will want it to decelerate quicker because you will have a shorter recovery time between drives. However, it mostly depends on personal preference.
The lever position relative to a given drag factor is different on every machine.
As dust builds up on and in the fan cage, one Concept 2 will have a different drag factor than another Concept 2 at the same lever position. However, both machines will perform identically with the same drag factor setting. This allows you to calibrate different machines to the same drag even if they require different lever #.
To see the drag factor, go to your main menu- > Click More Options -> Click Display Drag Factor. Then start rowing and it will display.
M36|5'8"/173CM|146lb/66KG|LWT|MHR 192|RHR 42|2020: 5K 18:52.9 (@1:53.2/500)|C2-D+Slides+EndureRow Seat+NSI Minicell Foam