Ever since my OCS time trial in May, I have been seeking free speed on the bike. I rode home from that race with my friend, Courtney. She played a Tri-Talk podcast about Wind Tunnel Testing. The show discussed testing of several athletes with varying bike setups in a wind tunnel. They measured velocity and wattage to determine what changes in their bike setup resulted a faster 40k time trial. Here are some bullet points that I remember:
I ordered an aero helmet for just $119 at Category One Cycles. I picked this model because it covered the ears and got good reviews. It should arrive tomorrow!
And – I am going to wear my other tri top at my next race. It’s more skin tight than my favorite top.
I’ve also spent alot of time fiddling with my aero position. I wanted to get just a tad lower, and also get my forearms so they were completely horizontal. I lowered my handlebars by about 1/2″ by removing two spacers. I also fiddled with the location of the elbow pads on my aero bars, moving them closer to my seat. Then I went out for an easy paced 50 mile HILLY ride. By the end of the ride, my entire body was in pain: knees, feet, elbows, shoulders, and especially, my BUTT! And my long run the next day was truly awful! I had planned to move everything back the way it was, but…
Two days later, my body was feeling back to normal, and I thought “Hmmmm, I’m curious what my average speed was on that painful ride.” Checking my cateye computer showed an average speed of 16.6 mph. I ALWAYS get 15.4 mph on my easy paced rides. I double checked my heart rate records, and yes, at 138 average bmp, that was an easy ride. WOW – that’s 1.2 mph of FREE speed. I decided I would keep the new bike configuration, in hopes my body would adapt.
These are not great pictures (captured from video), as I didn’t think to mark the position of the camera with respect to the bike, so the angle of the shot is slightly different. Anyway, I think you can still see that I am just a tad lower, and my forearms are more horizontal.
In taking it even further, I experimented with moving my elbow pads inward toward each other, and sliding the aero bars forward and back to adjust where my hands rested. This took quite a lot of fiddling to get it to feel right. I’d adjust the pads and/or bars, ride for a while, stop alongside the road to fiddle some more, ride some more, etc. I think I finally have it right.
I have gone on three shorter bike rides (13-26 miles) since that first painful day in the new position, and have not had any pain…YEAH! I can’t wait to go out on that 50 mile ride again to see what my average speed is. Am I just imagining this FREE speed? But, that will have to wait until after my Over the Mountain race, which is only 6 days away!
I videotaped my initial efforts at adjusting my handlebars and cut it down to a 10 minute clip. You’ll find it interesting if you have no idea how to remove handlebars from a bike and want to learn:
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Fortunately, I don't have a wife - LOL!
Seriously, we've had stuff stolen out of our garage, so I KEEP my bike in the living room which is sort of my office. It's sitting right behind me as I type so I know it's safe and sound.
Bike fixing in the lounge - It's obvious who wears the trousers in your house.
I would get my ears boxed...