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-   -   Cycling thread - been a while since the last one (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/147379-cycling-thread-been-while-since-last-one.html)

dd74 02-10-2004 02:25 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by BlueSkyJaunte
On my motorcycle I tell myself everyone's aiming for me. Unfortunately I don't have the speed/acceleration on the bicycle to maintain that philosophy. Very unsettling. :(
Okay, in that case, here's a tip I've learned from urban riding:

1) While in traffic, keep your hands on the brake hoods (you know where those are right?) This stabilizes the handlebars and steering of the bike, and;

2) Keep yourself in a gear that gives you torque. Like cars, it's torque that gets you out of trouble. In cycling, it's not a spin gear where you're doing 80 RPMs, but something a little slower and using a bit more leg strength.

When someone gets in your way, you're already poised for power. You only need to stand up on the cranks (pedals), and you're gone like a Porsche in 3rd gear. Works for me every time.

Oh, I'm sorry. I forgot tip #3.

You have to shave those fine legs of yours. :D

BlueSkyJaunte 02-10-2004 02:32 PM

I'm down with #1 and #2, dd, but my wife would divorce me for #3. :)

Actually I've been doing those instinctively, I guess. The problem is that "traffic" where I live means people passing me at 50-80 mph (well, I guess 30-60 relative, since my speed can't be over 20).

Doesn't give me a whole lot of reaction time or room for error. Hell, by the time I realize they're coming up on me, I could've been dead.

On the motorcycle I just twist the grip, and they're gone.

Maybe I'll just get a trainer and pedal alongside Lance during the next Tour. ;)

dd74 02-10-2004 02:42 PM

Speaking of Lance - what a freak of nature that guy is. He is to a bicycle what an engine is to a motorcycle in my mind.

There's a theory about him I'm not sure I'm down with. Maybe a radiologist can confirm this. But his radiology treatments broke down his body so severely, that it altered his muscle structure to the point that on his way back to strength, he developed an entirely "new" physique, including much stronger organs and muscle tissue.

I don't know. That's a little less plausible than use of these new designer (and undetectable) drugs in my mind. I'm not knocking the guy, but if he wins a 6th Tour, there's some serious "Terminator" action happening inside him.

BlueSkyJaunte 02-10-2004 03:05 PM

I think in his book (I didn't read it, a coworker told me about it) he talks about how he rebuilt himself (or oriented his training that way) after the cancer treatments with cycling in mind...whereas prior to his cancer he had more of a triathlete's build.

turbo6bar 02-10-2004 05:17 PM

When you're trying to build muscle, the effort actually tears muscle. The regrown muscle is stronger than the old. Maybe this is what Lance experienced???

Quote:

Originally posted by dd74
Damn, man! Didn't you go to work today? :D
Self-employment has its benefits, ya know. Sometimes you get to work 60 hours a week, and sometimes you get to work 4 hours a week. :)

Quote:

posted by CamB
I was short on time (or is that speed?) - I ended up with slightly less than half what you did.
When I came back to cycling (Feb 03), I rode less than 15 miles/ride. You grow into it. The best 911 drivers and strongest cyclists read from the same book... basically more time = more speed ;)

Adam 02-10-2004 06:43 PM

I thought I'd let you guys know that I'm going down to order a new Trek tomorrow. The store owner is an old repeat client of mine and is doing a great deal for me on a 4100 or 4300 MTB.

I don't really need disc brakes (although they're really cool), but I do want the superlight alloy frame. I'll take some pictures of it over the weekend for you guys. It'll be good to get back on the road and do a little trail riding and off-roading.

Even though it'll be for fun, it's mainly for fitness. I was thinking about a Topeak Panorama cycle computer, but I'll probably go with a good old CatEye. The consumer reviews don't favour the Topeak very well. All I want it to do is tell me my speed and trip/total distance travelled.

I ain't gonna be shaving my legs, though. ;)

CamB 02-10-2004 11:40 PM

Make sure the cord for the computer is long enough to go down the (looooong) MTB forks - I couldn't fit a regular Cateye (the cheap NZD40 one) on my MTB and still wind the forks out to their longest setting. I took it off and bought the Giant road bike instead - it even came with a computer ;)

I sorta figured I didn't need to know how far or how fast when I was off road, so MTB remains with nothing. I occasionally ride it around town though, just for fun. When I bought it (in November, haha, I didn't last long with one bike), a road bike was far from my mind and I got a set of Geax Streetrunner Kevlar tyres - they are 26x1.25 and nice and fast on-road. Worth it for another NZ$80 or so (or less because there are cheaper tyres too) if you plan to do lots of road riding.

JavaBrewer 02-11-2004 07:54 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by dd74
Okay, in that case, here's a tip I've learned from urban riding:

1) While in traffic, keep your hands on the brake hoods (you know where those are right?) This stabilizes the handlebars and steering of the bike, and;

2) Keep yourself in a gear that gives you torque. Like cars, it's torque that gets you out of trouble. In cycling, it's not a spin gear where you're doing 80 RPMs, but something a little slower and using a bit more leg strength.

When someone gets in your way, you're already poised for power. You only need to stand up on the cranks (pedals), and you're gone like a Porsche in 3rd gear. Works for me every time.

Oh, I'm sorry. I forgot tip #3.

You have to shave those fine legs of yours. :D

#1 is key - you have way more control of the bike - only use the drops for TT style riding. I had wide bars and liked how riding the hoods opened my chest more for breathing. We usually dropped anyone who tried to ride in the drops on group rides - very dangerous.

#2 depends on your riding style. I was very focused on spinning 80-100 RPM with bursts to 130+ RPM. This resulted in quick acceleration from a seated position (more control - less wind exposure) that was the norm in road racing. Either way, I think a road mishap with a car or pedestrian will happen too fast for you to be able to react to.

#3 yes, leg shaving is the norm for road riding. If you're serious about the sport there won't be an issue. Sure the first time I shaved it felt weird, and I wore a lot of long pants off the bike, but that changed and I actually enjoyed the smooth skin - as did my GF. Hey lets be real, racing bikes = seriously great legs. Body builders at the gym had nothing on me. Riding a road bike with hairy legs is like driving a 911 decked out with J.C. Whitney's latest.

JavaBrewer 02-11-2004 08:04 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by dd74
Speaking of Lance - what a freak of nature that guy is. He is to a bicycle what an engine is to a motorcycle in my mind.

There's a theory about him I'm not sure I'm down with. Maybe a radiologist can confirm this. But his radiology treatments broke down his body so severely, that it altered his muscle structure to the point that on his way back to strength, he developed an entirely "new" physique, including much stronger organs and muscle tissue.

I don't know. That's a little less plausible than use of these new designer (and undetectable) drugs in my mind. I'm not knocking the guy, but if he wins a 6th Tour, there's some serious "Terminator" action happening inside him.

The whole radiology/physique sounds fake - but Lance's dominance in the sport is not. He is a true champion. The kind of performance he displays on a bike only comes from years and years of training more miles than most people drive in a lifetime. I recall early in his career when he was a classics specialist. He was in the TDF and it was a 30+ mile time trial. About halfway through Miguel Indurain (Banesto) blasted past him for 2 or 4 minutes to eventually take something like 12+ minutes out of Lance. :eek: Talk about the master vs. student. I imagine Lance is now close to, or even with, Miguel's performance when he was in his prime. To my knowledge Miguel still holds the records for VO max and other endurance type measurements. What distinguishes Lance from the previous cast of characters is that he overcame cancer (Greg Lemond overcame a shotgun blast - but still not comparable) to achieve the success his has today.

Top that off - he is also dating Sherl Crowe.

dd74 02-11-2004 08:30 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by dmoolenaar
[B
#3 yes, leg shaving is the norm for road riding. If you're serious about the sport there won't be an issue. Sure the first time I shaved it felt weird, and I wore a lot of long pants off the bike, but that changed and I actually enjoyed the smooth skin - as did my GF. Hey lets be real, racing bikes = seriously great legs. Body builders at the gym had nothing on me. Riding a road bike with hairy legs is like driving a 911 decked out with J.C. Whitney's latest. [/B]
Okay, though most ur...men...will be turned off by this, my GF at the time I took a Norelco to my sticks, thought it was a huge turn on. I couldn't get her off me or my legs. What does that mean? I dunno. Was she a closet L-girl? No. Did I feel I needed to buy an airline ticket to Sweeden for 'an operation?' No. I only equate it to the same as one shaving their head: don't knock it until you try it! :D

dd74 02-11-2004 08:35 AM

As far as Greg and Lance go, well from what I know about LeMond is most shotgun blasts like he suffered would kill almost anyone. His conditioning was what pulled him through. He won his next Tour with buckshot still in his kidneys (I believe).

But cycling almost killed him too. He developed a debilitating disease (I forget the ailment's name) which is induced by too much exercise. It supposedly plagues quite a few athletes in sports where there's continual exertion - i.e. cycling.

BlueSkyJaunte 02-11-2004 08:53 AM

Greg LeMond
Born: June 26, 1961
Cyclist

3-time Tour de France winner (1986,89-90); only non-European to win the event until Lance Armstrong in 1999; retired in Dec. 1994 after being diagnosed with a rare muscular disease known as mitochondrial myopathy.

JavaBrewer 02-11-2004 09:19 AM

Yeah, not to minimize Greg's gunshot, he actually has a couple pellets still in the lining of his heart, but I think the total body attack of Lance's cancer and treatment trumps.

That brings me to an "issue" I had with Greg. I couldn't help but call B.S. to his claim of disease and subsequent dropout of the 1991 TDF. He was leading the race with Miguel posing a serious threat. After the close stage finish Greg made some bogus comment to belittle Miguel, vowing to crush him in the next days stage. Hey they have to be arrogant, I know, but his comments were especially childish and low. Of course Miguel proceeded to absolulely crush Greg the next day and go on to win the race. It was after that deciding stage that Greg immediately started making excuses of health problems and withdrew from the race. His thinking was if he couldn't win the yellow why keep going. What a baby. There are guys that slug through with fevers, broken bones, and other major setbacks, just to finish. Apparently Greg was not up to that sort of behavior. I've never viewed him with the same respect after that race.

dd74 02-11-2004 09:27 AM

He is a whiner to a degree. But the "I will crush you" talk is all psychological. It's like boxing. Besides, Greg by then was wearing out. What's a pro cyclists career span? Seven years? He was racing since '80, so I don't think he did too poorly.

His freakin' filthy rich now. All he races are cars now that Trek bought LeMond Bicycles off him.

He is sort of a skeezer, though, firing his old man from the company, and all...

CamB 02-11-2004 11:18 AM

#3 yes, leg shaving is the norm for road riding. If you're serious about the sport there won't be an issue. Sure the first time I shaved it felt weird, and I wore a lot of long pants off the bike, but that changed and I actually enjoyed the smooth skin - as did my GF. Hey lets be real, racing bikes = seriously great legs. Body builders at the gym had nothing on me. Riding a road bike with hairy legs is like driving a 911 decked out with J.C. Whitney's latest.

Haha, this confirms my current suspicion that cyclists who shave their legs do so because they love their legs (which represent much time and effort). The "it means road rash heals faster" is a scam.

Cam

Disclaimer: While I don't currently shave my legs, I'm thinking about it. Hairy legs and lycra look even more wrong than shaved legs and lycra.

JavaBrewer 02-11-2004 11:24 AM

No not a scam - road rash is easier to administer to w/o hair. Plus you don't get bugs stuck to your legs, wind resistence :), massage's are better (deep tissue - yikes!), and you're not automatically labeled a Fred. That title you have to earn. Cyclists who claim shaving is not for asthetic reasons are not being completely honest.

JavaBrewer 02-11-2004 11:29 AM

What's strange is that men are quick to bash leg shaving but rarely bat an eye when some dude shaves his chest for that body builder look. :rolleyes:

BlueSkyJaunte 02-11-2004 11:50 AM

I am a reasonable facsimile of a sasquatch. No way in heck am I shaving any part of my anatomy below the neckline.

I had to have chest surgery in '93 and it itched like crazy when the hair grew back.

dd74 02-11-2004 12:20 PM

Both Cam and David are right:

Road rash heals faster, and hairy legs and lycra don't do for an appealing look. Think of your fattest, greasiest uncle bedecked with gold chains and in a Fila sweatsuit, or worse, a Speedo, and herein lies the image of shapeless hairy stumps stymied in lycra shorts.

As the girls who like good shaved legs say: "Ewwwww!" :D

BlueSkyJaunte 02-11-2004 12:30 PM

Ahh..... I see the problem here.

You're assuming I care what people think about my appearance.

Actually, my wife likes the fact that I am hirsute...it keeps her from "sticking" to my chest in warmer weather. ;)


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