Hi,
Thank you all for the fruitful arguments and views. I did not think this would bring such a discussion.
I raised the point as I was trying to understand the phenomenon. It happened 6 times out 6, while I focused specifically on maintaining 'my' technique from start to end.
jamesg wrote: ↑December 4th, 2024, 11:59 am
If you use Ergdata, there's a page where we can see a dozen or so parameters, including average and max handle force, pull speed and length. Maybe you can see what's changing.
Except for retrieving the .csv file and calculating the Distance/Stroke, I couldn't find a way to access other parameters. I don't have a personal trainer and don't have the time and money for one so, in addition to liking the scientific process of it, analyzing data may have been my way to improve the efficiency of the whole technique.
jamesg wrote: ↑December 4th, 2024, 11:59 am
ErgData can't show Distance per Stroke. But if pace is stable, and strokerate goes up, distance per stroke MUST go down. Drivetime might reveal whether time is lost in drive or recovery, but generally speaking, the drivetime becomes a bit longer (reducing drive speed), and recovery gets rushed (reducing force needed to accelerate the flywheel) causing a weaker stroke. At least, that is what ORM's data shows when we look for fatigue setting in.
Regarding not seeing this behaviour: please realise that a PM5 is an extremely blunt instrument in all its metrics. So it could very well be that a strokerate of 19.5 deteriorates into a 20.4, without ever seeing the difference on the monitor.
I plotted distance/stroke vs time and, as you described it, distance per stroke decreases as stroke rate increases. By understanding this, I thought I could pinpoint if I make mistake in the drive or the recovery phase. I keep reading (on this forum) about the losses of Watts if technique is not properly applied. Is my recovery to quick at the end that it increases SR?
I don't believe the coarse reading of the PM5 plays a role while reading 19 (values 18.5 to 19.5) or 20 (values 19.5 to 20.5); the general trend of the SR curve shows an increase.
Sakly wrote: ↑December 5th, 2024, 1:53 am
I think it's not needed to overthink such stuff. If you WANT to have exact metrics for stroke rate and/or pace, you can focus on these. Rate can be controlled by time, too, not only by shown rate of the monitor.
Probably overthinking but also just killing the time while rowing and having selected the wrong boring film (which cannot be changed) during exercise .
and this has made me think about my next question:
Is anybody using PM5 data to evaluate the efficiency of their technique?