Just started training with Power? Post your questions/comments here!
#8376
Blast from the Past
Wahoo element syncs to dropbox. This was a hugeeeee benefit for me. Sync to dropbox, and have golden cheetah auto pull new activities from that folder when I launch. It also sends to strava / training peaks etc. But I rarely look at training peaks except to get my hrTSS from rides where i don't have a powermeter.
I have no issues if I simply finish rides & let the Bolt do its thing. Rides just magically appear in TP.
#8377
You can delete those workouts out of TP before syncing to WKO.
#8378
Blast from the Past
#8379
Cat 2
The only issue I have with Wahoo (Bolt) is when I open it up using the phone app, which I don't do often. It syncs with the app and syncs again with TP. More times than not this puts a duplicate workout or two into training peaks. Then when I open WKO4 it syncs with TP and puts the duplicate there. Really messes with ATL/TSB. Have to go into TP, delete the duplicates then re-snc WKO4.
I have no issues if I simply finish rides & let the Bolt do its thing. Rides just magically appear in TP.
I have no issues if I simply finish rides & let the Bolt do its thing. Rides just magically appear in TP.
#8380
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 4,449
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it's more than annoying if one has a coach and TrainingPeaks is used, as many coaches download the files from TP.com automatically.
#8381
Senior Member
Still having a hard time transferring all my legacy power files into WKO. Strava bulk exported as GPX, Cycling Analytics exported as .fit and .json. WKO doesn't take gpx or json. I can't find a converter for .json, there may be one for GPX to TCX (GPSBabel) that I'll try after work. This shouldn't be that hard =\
#8382
Cat 2
Still having a hard time transferring all my legacy power files into WKO. Strava bulk exported as GPX, Cycling Analytics exported as .fit and .json. WKO doesn't take gpx or json. I can't find a converter for .json, there may be one for GPX to TCX (GPSBabel) that I'll try after work. This shouldn't be that hard =\
#8383
Senior Member
I just literally (as the english would say) found this out about about this 5 minutes eariler. How WKO has millions of $$ in development and can't do this is beyond me.
#8384
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Houston
Posts: 606
Bikes: Trek Madone, Blue Triad SL, Dixie Flyer BTB
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Well, I think you may be overestimating the development budget of WKO. That said, WKO+/Training Peaks are the 'premium' brand in training software and have traditionally had a pretty strong hold on the market (though maybe not as strong now as they used to have). I don't think they consider inter-operabilty with competing products to be in their best interests; they'd rather tie you to their platform. Hence the tight integration between WKO+ and TrainingPeaks, yet at the same time they've closed the API's that were previously used by products such as Golden Cheetah for syncing with TrainingPeaks. I happen disagree with that 'protectionist' thinking, and I think it's doing them more harm than good.
#8385
Senior Member
So I did a spirited hilly group ride yesterday, and finished with a IF of 1.15 for 1.5hours moving time ~1.75 hours elapsed. I did a 20 min FTP test outside last week and saw a small bump in my FTP compared to 1 month ago that was performed on the trainer(same power meter). Do I just suck at pacing/motivation, or is this due to the nature of a hilly group ride where a lot of time is spent at high efforts and then a lot of time is spent recovering. My coggan weighted avg power was ~35watts above my FTP for the ride. I know training peaks suggests an IF over 1 for an hour effort is an indication fitness has improved. Just wondering if I should retest soon or how to go about calculating my FTP from this ride to make sure my zones are set correctly.
#8386
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Houston
Posts: 606
Bikes: Trek Madone, Blue Triad SL, Dixie Flyer BTB
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So I did a spirited hilly group ride yesterday, and finished with a IF of 1.15 for 1.5hours moving time ~1.75 hours elapsed. I did a 20 min FTP test outside last week and saw a small bump in my FTP compared to 1 month ago that was performed on the trainer(same power meter). Do I just suck at pacing/motivation, or is this due to the nature of a hilly group ride where a lot of time is spent at high efforts and then a lot of time is spent recovering. My coggan weighted avg power was ~35watts above my FTP for the ride. I know training peaks suggests an IF over 1 for an hour effort is an indication fitness has improved. Just wondering if I should retest soon or how to go about calculating my FTP from this ride to make sure my zones are set correctly.
It might be worth retesting to see what you can do in a more steady effort, but I wouldn't assume that NP from a highly variable ride is a direct indicator of a new FTP. Also, if you're the type of rider who often produces these 'NP-buster' types of numbers, a longer FTP test should be preferred. Something like the 2x8' test on Trainer Road will most likely overestimate your FTP.
#8387
Senior Member
What was the Variability Index for the ride? I often reproduce that scenario in crits, due to the surges/attacks mixed in with lulls (and even coasting on a more technical course). IMHO you can't really used Normalized Power to estimate FTP, especially if you're the kind of rider with a big anaerobic engine who's good at above-threshold efforts. I'm guessing your average power was quite a bit lower?
It might be worth retesting to see what you can do in a more steady effort, but I wouldn't assume that NP from a highly variable ride is a direct indicator of a new FTP. Also, if you're the type of rider who often produces these 'NP-buster' types of numbers, a longer FTP test should be preferred. Something like the 2x8' test on Trainer Road will most likely overestimate your FTP.
It might be worth retesting to see what you can do in a more steady effort, but I wouldn't assume that NP from a highly variable ride is a direct indicator of a new FTP. Also, if you're the type of rider who often produces these 'NP-buster' types of numbers, a longer FTP test should be preferred. Something like the 2x8' test on Trainer Road will most likely overestimate your FTP.
#8388
Senior Member
So just as an update, I've been sitting with a fairly negative TSB for a month now. My CTL should stabilize as it did for you, and daily workload should settle at a relatively steady rate. Not sure how much I can continue to ramp the ATL but haven't done many rides over 30 miles yet for the year. Anyone have any thoughts on if this is sustainable? Haven't gotten injured or burned out yet, but its been a hard road so far.
#8389
My idea of fun
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Gainesville, FL
Posts: 9,920
Bikes: '06 Litespeed Tuscany, '02 Kona Lavadome, '07 Giant TCR Advanced, '07 Karate Monkey
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So I was one of those guys with an early Quarq (Cinqo Saturn, then 4 other Cinqos). They all died.
Has Quarq addressed these issues and fixed their spider to be more robust?
Has Quarq addressed these issues and fixed their spider to be more robust?
#8390
Senior Member
N=4, but I've been a fan, I have 4 Quarq's.: 3 Elsa's that I have had since 2013 and one of the new Specialized Dzero's that I've had since March. They are all consistent and have been robust. The one issue I did have was because I broke the battery holder using pliers to open it up. That's a big no no and when the battery case spins the numbers will be off. Not sure the connection between the two, but I had it fixed under warranty and haven't had an issue since. It's nice that the new ones let me check the battery level in their new Bluetooth app.
#8391
Cat 2
Took advantage of the p2m upgrade deal. Upgraded both my old meters to their new NGeco model and get a power meter on my new road bike. Hopefully I'll have a bit better aprity between my road bike and tt bike as well.
#8394
Cat 2
Buy one of the popular books instead is my opinion. Learn why training plans are made the way they are and you'll be better off in the long run. Cyslist training bible, training and racing with a power meter, time crunched cyclist etc.
#8395
Elite Fred
I have changed my mind about new racers and needing power information.
Being 64 years old and having raced into my 60's (now retired) and having trained over pretty much the same routes for many years I never needed any power gizmo and only needed my speed and a good look at the Spanish moss (I live in Gainesville, FL) for which way it was hanging and its angle (so I knew the wind direction and speed) to have a great feel for how hard I was going. After multiple rides every week for many years I was a fine tuned instrument. I knew when I was slacking and I knew when I was killing it even if it didn't feel that way.
Now I see that for someone without that world of experience a power meter can be really important. Most importantly it is a device that doesn't lie to you. It is critical to "dose" your Sweet Spot rides and your intervals correctly to get maximum benefit.
I take back every post I ever said about not needing one unless you are an old fart racer.
Being 64 years old and having raced into my 60's (now retired) and having trained over pretty much the same routes for many years I never needed any power gizmo and only needed my speed and a good look at the Spanish moss (I live in Gainesville, FL) for which way it was hanging and its angle (so I knew the wind direction and speed) to have a great feel for how hard I was going. After multiple rides every week for many years I was a fine tuned instrument. I knew when I was slacking and I knew when I was killing it even if it didn't feel that way.
Now I see that for someone without that world of experience a power meter can be really important. Most importantly it is a device that doesn't lie to you. It is critical to "dose" your Sweet Spot rides and your intervals correctly to get maximum benefit.
I take back every post I ever said about not needing one unless you are an old fart racer.
#8396
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2015
Location: Music City, USA
Posts: 4,444
Bikes: bikes
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Training is training and racing is racing. I think some people really confuse the two, or blur the line too completely.
Group riding and racing skills are the most important thing a new racer can learn, in my opinion. Especially when you're new, basically any riding is going to help you improve, so the training doesn't have to be all that sophisticated (or at all) to be extremely effective.
But for training on your own, a power meter can give you a vast amount of useful info that can really help you maximize training and not waste time. I cringe when I think of all of the rides I used to do to accumulate 20+ hours a week. I bet 5-10 of those hours were completely useless from a physiological standpoint. I'd have probably been so much better off with 12-15 hours of "actual" riding at an effective intensity.
Live and learn.
Group riding and racing skills are the most important thing a new racer can learn, in my opinion. Especially when you're new, basically any riding is going to help you improve, so the training doesn't have to be all that sophisticated (or at all) to be extremely effective.
But for training on your own, a power meter can give you a vast amount of useful info that can really help you maximize training and not waste time. I cringe when I think of all of the rides I used to do to accumulate 20+ hours a week. I bet 5-10 of those hours were completely useless from a physiological standpoint. I'd have probably been so much better off with 12-15 hours of "actual" riding at an effective intensity.
Live and learn.
#8397
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Sacramento, California, USA
Posts: 40,863
Bikes: Specialized Tarmac, Canyon Exceed, Specialized Transition, Ellsworth Roots, Ridley Excalibur
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Is it as good as a real coach? Nope, but much cheaper. Is it as good as putting together your own custom plan from all the available information in print and on the web? No, but much easier.
#8398
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Redwood City, CA
Posts: 10,978
Bikes: aggressive agreement is what I ride.
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Training is training and racing is racing. I think some people really confuse the two, or blur the line too completely.
Group riding and racing skills are the most important thing a new racer can learn, in my opinion. Especially when you're new, basically any riding is going to help you improve, so the training doesn't have to be all that sophisticated (or at all) to be extremely effective.
But for training on your own, a power meter can give you a vast amount of useful info that can really help you maximize training and not waste time. I cringe when I think of all of the rides I used to do to accumulate 20+ hours a week. I bet 5-10 of those hours were completely useless from a physiological standpoint. I'd have probably been so much better off with 12-15 hours of "actual" riding at an effective intensity.
Live and learn.
Group riding and racing skills are the most important thing a new racer can learn, in my opinion. Especially when you're new, basically any riding is going to help you improve, so the training doesn't have to be all that sophisticated (or at all) to be extremely effective.
But for training on your own, a power meter can give you a vast amount of useful info that can really help you maximize training and not waste time. I cringe when I think of all of the rides I used to do to accumulate 20+ hours a week. I bet 5-10 of those hours were completely useless from a physiological standpoint. I'd have probably been so much better off with 12-15 hours of "actual" riding at an effective intensity.
Live and learn.
#8399
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2015
Location: Music City, USA
Posts: 4,444
Bikes: bikes
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Maybe. But I did a whole bunch of group rides to make up those hours, and when I finally got a powermeter I realized that I spent an inordinate amount of time coasting and soft pedaling on group rides, and still again when on my own.