My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
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My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
Postby samsplan » Thu Sep 24, 2009 12:31 am
I've started taking my riding a bit more seriously, starting to throw in a few training hill climbs and that sort of thing.
So I've been thinking about cadence a bit, and though I don't have a sensor for it, I figure I can get a pretty good estimate just by counting for 15 seconds and then x4. To get to the point - my normal, feels "comfortable, efficient, almost resting" cadence is about 105 rpm. To really 'spin', to get to a cadence that feels fast, I've got to hit about 125 rpm! A cadence of 80 would really feel like I was grinding away, so maybe this explains why 40-50 was such a painful struggle on a recent long hill climb (my lowest gear is 42/23 and gradient > 10%).
I've read that normal, efficient cadence should be 80-90. Is it a problem I'm nowhere near that? And if it is, what should I do to change?
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Re: My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
Postby Grant W » Thu Sep 24, 2009 7:19 am
For a gradient of 10%, riding 42-23 is a bit of an ask comfortably. I might consider buying a rear cassette up to 27/28 and that will make your climbing a little easier as well as increasing your cadence.
Cadence is a personal thing, but climbing at over 100 seems extreme.
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Re: My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
Postby sogood » Thu Sep 24, 2009 7:50 am
RK wrote:And that is Wikipedia - I can write my own definition.
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Re: My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
Postby tripstobaltimore » Thu Sep 24, 2009 11:44 am
Do what you feel most comfortable at. The 'recommended' range is 90-100 for regular riding, so you are not too far off. Don't get to carried away with cadence, its not overly important. As long as you are not grinding away at 40rpm I think you're doing ok. Cadence does usually drop on hills.samsplan wrote:I've always been a pretty fast, focused commuter. I generally like to get from point A to B as fast as possible, and reckon I may as well get a good workout from my commute. I'm ashamed to admit that this has led to a brazenly bad habit of often running red lights when I deem it 'safe' (but I'm really trying hard to rein that right back after reading another thread on here) - anyway that's a whole other issue...
I've started taking my riding a bit more seriously, starting to throw in a few training hill climbs and that sort of thing.
So I've been thinking about cadence a bit, and though I don't have a sensor for it, I figure I can get a pretty good estimate just by counting for 15 seconds and then x4. To get to the point - my normal, feels "comfortable, efficient, almost resting" cadence is about 105 rpm. To really 'spin', to get to a cadence that feels fast, I've got to hit about 125 rpm! A cadence of 80 would really feel like I was grinding away, so maybe this explains why 40-50 was such a painful struggle on a recent long hill climb (my lowest gear is 42/23 and gradient > 10%).
I've read that normal, efficient cadence should be 80-90. Is it a problem I'm nowhere near that? And if it is, what should I do to change?
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Postby Bantam Roosta » Fri Sep 25, 2009 2:22 pm
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Re: My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
Postby chris641 » Sun Sep 27, 2009 11:27 am
2008 Merida Scultura Evo Team
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Re: My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
Postby samsplan » Tue Sep 29, 2009 4:51 pm
To help on the hills I'm looking at swapping my 42 chainring out for a 39. I might also change my 7 speed cassette for one with a 26 and/or 28 cog on it. Should be all good!
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Re: My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
Postby chris641 » Tue Sep 29, 2009 7:38 pm
2008 Merida Scultura Evo Team
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Re: My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
Postby Rockford » Tue Sep 29, 2009 11:47 pm
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Re: My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
Postby Alex Simmons/RST » Wed Sep 30, 2009 5:23 am
I used to pootle along at 100-105rpm. I'm lower now days that I am less powerful.Rockford wrote:I did 105 cadence on the trainer tonight. I can't see how anyone would cycle normally or feel it's at a 'resting' pace spinning that fast. I was sitting on around 38Km/h on a fairly low gear (53/18). How fast are you going when you are cycling?
Just a matter of what you are used to/prefer.
Track riders are used to higher cadences.
Focus on the effort level and pick a gear that feel good. Cadence just comes along for the ride.
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Re: My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
Postby Max » Wed Sep 30, 2009 5:36 am
Max
Cycling is sometimes like bobbing for apples in a bucket full of dicks. - SydGuy
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Re: My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
Postby samsplan » Tue Oct 13, 2009 12:55 am
Rockford, I don't have a trainer, so I can't say anything for my cadence/speed in controlled indoor conditions. But on the open road, I tend to average somewhere between 30-35 km/h. On the flat without wind, I estimate I would be spinning about 105 in probably 42/15, and doing about 35km/h (I do have a speedo, but no cadence sensor, so that data just comes from sometimes counting the number of pedal strokes for 15 seconds).Rockford wrote:I did 105 cadence on the trainer tonight. I can't see how anyone would cycle normally or feel it's at a 'resting' pace spinning that fast. I was sitting on around 38Km/h on a fairly low gear (53/18). How fast are you going when you are cycling?
[EDIT: According to this calculator, 105 in 42/15 would mean I'm doing 37km/h... so maybe it's slightly less than 105 in 42/15, I'm not sure. The hardest thing is knowing what's actually flat!]
Increasingly frequent slipping of the chain when under pressure has dictated a new cassette and chain. So I've replaced my 7 speed 13-23 with an 11-28 (which I rediscovered in the shed, and is near-new since it was bought for a now written-off MTB shortly before I crashed it). I wasn't too sure about going from 13-14-15-17-19-21-23 to 11-13-15-18-21-24-28 and dealing with greater jumps between my gears. But so far so goodsamsplan wrote:To help on the hills I'm looking at swapping my 42 chainring out for a 39. I might also change my 7 speed cassette for one with a 26 and/or 28 cog on it. Should be all good!
Of course (Murphy's Law) I mildly injured my knee while running on Saturday, didn't I? So I haven't yet had a chance to do any real climbing with the new cassette. But I'm hoping 42/28 will give significantly less leg agony than the old 42/23!! I'll play with this setup for a bit before seeing about throwing a 39 into the mix.
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Re: My 'normal' cadence is ~105...
Postby samsplan » Tue Oct 13, 2009 2:11 am
Previously, I said that a cadence of 125 was beginning to feel fast. As for when I'm really spinning flat-out, this calculator prompted me to consider my cadence when descending big hills flat outRockford wrote:I did 105 cadence on the trainer tonight. I can't see how anyone would cycle normally or feel it's at a 'resting' pace spinning that fast.
Case study:
I rode down Mt Ainslie a couple of weeks ago with my old 13-23 cassette. It's a fairly straight descent, so there's plenty of opportunity to build-up speed. I pedalled hard enough to max out my highest gear (53/13) and hit 77km/h. I was spinning fast. Don't know if this is right, but the cadence calculator deduces 150rpm. I certainly can't keep that up for too long!
I'm keen to see if I can achieve the same cadence with the newly acquired 53/11 option. Apparently, that would be 91km/h wow! Hope I don't get any speed wobbles...
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