OhBeWan wrote: ↑August 8th, 2023, 10:36 am
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Any other ideas?
Going by the numbers you presented in the opening post :
- Ergometer-A 7:45 for 2000 m means 223 W average
- Ergometer-B 7:50 for 2000 m means 216 W average
Note that this is the power over the entire stroke, which means that the average power in the drive is much higher. E.g. for 1.5 sec drive/1.0 sec recovery (24 spm) the power difference in the drive increases to 11W.
Could the difference be caused by a tenser bungee cord? Yes, quite possible!
I measured the bungee tension of my own C2 with a luggage scale: it varied from 1.2 kg near the catch position to 2.2 kg near the finish position. Note that 1.0 kg on the luggage scale display equals 10N.
Take average 1.7 kg = 17 N. Take stroke rate 24 spm = 2.5 sec/stroke. Take roughly 1.5 sec drive ; 1.5 m drive distance.
Power needed for extending the bunjee in the drive = 17 x 1.5/1.5 = 17W.
It is hard to find real measurements for bungee tensions on this forum, but a difference of 1 kg between a heavily-used erg and a fairly-new erg seems quite possible. It would account for 10W difference.
Some people say "the bungee is elastic, so the energy used for extending it is returned in the recovery".
What the bungee does in the recovery is that it helps you to accelerate the body towards the catch position, but all the kinetic energy must be absorbed by your muscles nearing the catch position. There is probably no gain from a tenser bungee in the recovery!