I wonder how well I can re-adapt to high rating again. I am a shorter rower so initially my performance at low rating stuff wasn't great due to lack of leverage, I am hoping to make up for this with training in that range, but eventually if I decide to do time trials / races / tests I'll have to start training high rating again. I sort of planned to get to 2:00/500M for 45 mins R20 and then I was going to switch to Pete Plan, hoping that whenever I reach that point, my CNS is more normal and I don't feel as punished as I do now whenever I do high rating sprint pieces.lancecampeau wrote: ↑November 3rd, 2020, 12:31 pmIts was my goal to generate some constructive dialog and gather a broader perspective on this topic and that has certainly been the case (with added humor to boot).
I can definitely echo what Ampire said...This has been my exact experience as well... When I started in 2017, my rowing was pretty much r27+ all the time. Now, after 4 years, I routinely get better results at much lower rates (r18 to r24). Its for this reason why I record SPI in my logbook. Its been a helpful yardstick in measuring my ability over time.ampire wrote: ↑November 3rd, 2020, 10:43 amPersonally, a year ago I was getting some decent time trial results but my every day training was often in the 28-32 SPM range and my SPI was pretty poor for those.
I spent the past couple months R18-22 and the result is I think I am more efficient and probably have better form because of it. Now I am roughly doing the same paces I was doing a year ago but at R20 instead of R28 for example.
When I switched to slides from a static C2 Model D, it was pretty hard initially to make wattage at low ratings but I have adapted to it now and it feels pretty decent. My force curve looks much better now than it did a year ago.
![Image](https://i.imgur.com/US4OeV7.jpg)