Thank you!Francois wrote:John: if you are 3 sec faster then it is probably your technique that is perfectible!
It's .5 spm for 2 seconds, i.e. the same meters per stroke.
Thank you!Francois wrote:John: if you are 3 sec faster then it is probably your technique that is perfectible!
Thanks, Paul.PaulH wrote:I compliment you on being a much better rower than I am, and I'd suggest much better than most of the people on this board - the first time I used them I kept bouncing off the ends, losing my timing, and generally getting a very good aerobic workout with a very poor split.
Cheers, Paul
Chad, I will give you this, you do make me smile ... which is a good thing BTW ...Chad Williams wrote:Mark, you are very insecure. If you had a positive metal attitude, that would help you in a lot of ways.mpukita wrote:It looks like it has nothing to do with "able" (like you) or "incapable" (like me, as you insinuate)
Not very helpful at the beginning, but getting better towards the end.Chad Williams wrote:It is out there, go and find it like I did.
It was based on 16 water rowers, all different weights, heights and abilities, they where tested on slides and then off slides, then reversed, slides then static erg.
"In summery, the best performance increase was in the heavier individuals, improvements of between 3%-5%, in the lighter categories (male and female) the performance (making allowances for fatigue) was negative."
I like it very... strange!John Rupp wrote:How do you like the RowPerfect?ancho wrote:I've had several goes on RowPerfect, and the feeling is quite different, it makes you push more with your legs and less with the upper body.
RowPerfect idea is superb, general finish is much better on C2.
Not exactly. All of the scientific evidence I have seen has shown no particular difference between being on or off slides, and it appeared that there may even be a slight disadvantage as far as energy consumption goes when on the slides, inasmuch as that can be determined by HR monitoring.Francois wrote:Thanks Mark for your valuable feedback!
Regarding efficiency, Paul Smith (an able rower IMO) has done some tests that show that to generate the same watts on slides, one has to increase the stroke rate by about 1.5 spm (if I remember correctly). He concluded that if anything, slides are slightly disadvantageous for someone with good technique. Please Paul, correct me if I am wrong!
Xeno Muller (another able rower!) likes them alot.
I've posted this link to a comparison of dynamic ergs (i.e. ergs that are allowed to slide back and forth, like the RowPerfect or a C2 erg on slides) and static ergs (e.g. a C2 erg on the floor) in the old forum. I don't recall if people commented on the validity of the analysis. My only complaint about the analysis is that it doesn't consider the recovery (if you're strapped in, chances are you're pulling yourself forward, and that's not energetically free).mpukita wrote:Everything I've seen published says there is no advantage that can be determined scientifically. Yet, many post this as if it's fact. Maybe it is and I've just missed the results from the study or studies.
Thank you for giving an example of that, Paul.PaulH wrote:The problem with summing something up when you're wrong, John, is that the summing makes you more wrong.
I agree with your summary with the exception that if the ratio of drive to recovery stays the same, then your energy advantage is the same, not doubled, i.e. there is no energy advantage from increasing your stroke rate.arakawa wrote:
Assume that the ratio of drive to recovery is independent of stroke rate. Then, if you double your stroke rate, your drive time (the variable t in the analysis) is halved, thus doubling the energy advantage per stroke. But, because you doubled your stroke rate, you're enjoying this per stroke energy advantage twice as often.