They suggest doing the following, and seeing which results in the best amount of work (wattage, distance) as well as which feels the best.
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Minutes Rate Damper Setting
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Andy
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Minutes Rate Damper Setting
6 16 10
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Dark Horse rowing content is usually excellent. But if someone, especially a new rower, tries 16 SPM on damper 10 on a new (or freshly cleaned) erg they are going to be hurting. Very high torque at slow recovery speed so the flywheel is going to be starting at low low rpms each stroke. ouch.AndyH wrote: ↑September 25th, 2024, 5:03 pmCurious if anyone's done this. Was it worthwhile? Did it help you find a better drag factor than you were previously using?Code: Select all
Minutes Rate Damper Setting 6 16 10 5 20 8 4 24 6 3 28 4 2 32 2 1 Open Open
Andy
Thanks - 100% agree re 10 damper setting. How would you propose re-writing that workout to help find my ideal DF?Tsnor wrote: ↑September 25th, 2024, 9:06 pmDark Horse rowing content is usually excellent. But if someone, especially a new rower, tries 16 SPM on damper 10 on a new (or freshly cleaned) erg they are going to be hurting. Very high torque at slow recovery speed so the flywheel is going to be starting at low low rpms each stroke. ouch.AndyH wrote: ↑September 25th, 2024, 5:03 pmCurious if anyone's done this. Was it worthwhile? Did it help you find a better drag factor than you were previously using?Code: Select all
Minutes Rate Damper Setting 6 16 10 5 20 8 4 24 6 3 28 4 2 32 2 1 Open Open
Andy
If you want to try out different DF's suggest you use DF rather than damper setting, and only explore DF in the range of 80 to 140 until you've rowed enough to be sure you want to go outside this range.
Interesting way of looking at it. Can you explain a bit more to a new rower? How would I go about using this to figure out what's best for me?jamesg wrote: ↑September 26th, 2024, 1:53 amAll drag does is control the speed of our pull. So if we want the pull to take any given time, at our preferred pull force/length, we can adjust it. I find 0.6s and 90 df suits me quite well, at 320N and 1.2m and all ratings.
1.2x320x22/60=140W which is enough to drive my HR well over doc's suggested 120 max.
100% agree re damper setting of 10. Question is whether folks have used this and if it's helped find the best personal drag factor. Thoughts?Dangerscouse wrote: ↑September 26th, 2024, 2:54 amI'm not convinced that this is a good idea, but it must work for some people.
In addition to what Tsnor mentions, I've always found that you need time to adjust to drag factor as a significantly heavier or lighter stroke than usual will feel really strange to start with, and you'll instinctively not like it, unless you do it for a few sessions.
Tbh, there are so few people that suit a damper setting of 10 (assumed to be on a clean erg) that it doesn't make much sense to suggest it. Surely eight would be more than enough
I share this thought. Getting the hang of a certain DF is pretty tough, usually takes me two to three sessions.Dangerscouse wrote: ↑September 26th, 2024, 2:54 amIn addition to what Tsnor mentions, I've always found that you need time to adjust to drag factor as a significantly heavier or lighter stroke than usual will feel really strange to start with, and you'll instinctively not like it, unless you do it for a few sessions.
Even 8 is tough. Sprinters might like it although I saw a Mark Lewis video where he was trained by the WR holder on a short distance, which used DF160. The guy was build as a tank, so it wasn't that he missed muscle power to row at much higher DF.Dangerscouse wrote: ↑September 26th, 2024, 2:54 amTbh, there are so few people that suit a damper setting of 10 (assumed to be on a clean erg) that it doesn't make much sense to suggest it. Surely eight would be more than enough
I'll explain how I look at it, and James will correct me if I make a mistake.AndyH wrote: ↑September 26th, 2024, 9:38 amInteresting way of looking at it. Can you explain a bit more to a new rower? How would I go about using this to figure out what's best for me?jamesg wrote: ↑September 26th, 2024, 1:53 amAll drag does is control the speed of our pull. So if we want the pull to take any given time, at our preferred pull force/length, we can adjust it. I find 0.6s and 90 df suits me quite well, at 320N and 1.2m and all ratings.
1.2x320x22/60=140W which is enough to drive my HR well over doc's suggested 120 max.
Great way of thinking about it. Thanks!JaapvanE wrote: ↑September 26th, 2024, 10:32 amI don't think there is a simple excercise that will result in your optimal DF. Humans are no robots, so you need to get accustomed to a certain DF and how it feels. So do a couple of sessions at a low drag and see how it feels. If you feel too light at the catch, increase the drag. If it feels too heavy, decrease it. Try to keep the strokerate at something you like to use, so sufficiently low to have a decent breathing rythm.
Ime, it's trial and error, but it's probably not quite as important as you might think. All you want is to find the right df to make you more efficient, which probably is somewhere around 115-130, but it might be higher or lower.
How long have your been erging ("long time" "new to 6 months")
Thanks - you use 140+ for 500 - 1000 intervals?Sakly wrote: ↑September 26th, 2024, 11:49 amI don't know the workout, but now being 2 1/2 years on the rower, I adjust the DF frequently based on my muscular fatigue of the day. If I feel strong and recovered, I like higher DF like ~120. Feeling a bit of fatigue from gym the other day, I also like to set DF to ~100. Both values are fine for me on longer, low rate rows, like an hour or HM. For shorter stuff on higher rates, like 2k or 3x6min I did yesterday, I set DF to 130-140. Sprint stuff even higher, otherwise I cannot get the splits down, as I am a relatively slow athlete.