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Originally Posted by queerpunk
(Post 18511223)
Hola sucks. Instead, use Tunnelbear.
Install the Tunnelbear plugin for Chrome. Turn it on and set it to the UK. go to youtube.com/ucichannel find the video you want to watch. click on it. start it loading then turn off Tunnelbear (since there is a data limit with it, and you only need it to start streaming) That's the trick! Cheers! |
Originally Posted by gtrob
(Post 18512716)
Paint job looks terrible. It looks like a flat drawing. |
Those are the new cheaper LOOK frames, I think they retail around 2500US.
Ill have to see one in person, but they are a far cry from the L96 in about every way lol |
Originally Posted by gycho77
(Post 18512833)
Paint job looks terrible. It looks like a flat drawing.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piet_M...ces_in_culture |
1 Attachment(s)
Originally Posted by TrackMonkey7
(Post 18512973)
I'm not sure if you're referring to the paint on this particular bike, or the LOOK paint job in general which is largely similar if not the same on their other track frames, but:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piet_M...ces_in_culture http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=502715(I cannot upload original file because of the file size) I don't know why the paint job looks terrible. I'm guessing it's because of black lines in middle(not referring lines between different colors) |
Originally Posted by gtrob
(Post 18512716)
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Originally Posted by Dalai
(Post 18513172)
I'd still ride one.
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Originally Posted by gycho77
(Post 18513827)
haha no one hates free bike
When you are barreling through turns 3-4 and your seatpost drops an inch, you'll hate a free bike :D |
Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 18514356)
Ever wonder why sponsored riders sell their free bikes soon after their contract is up?
When you are barreling through turns 3-4 and your seatpost drops an inch, you'll hate a free bike :D |
Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 18514356)
Ever wonder why sponsored riders sell their free bikes soon after their contract is up?
When you are barreling through turns 3-4 and your seatpost drops an inch, you'll hate a free bike :D As you know I never experienced with sponsored bikes. So I don't know how they perform. My neighbor, retired track cyclist, told me that the sponsored bike(Cannondale Aluminum) broke several times and carbon frames had problems with headset and BB. If the current sponsored bike don't suffer this problems, I will be happy with the free bike haha |
Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 18514356)
Ever wonder why sponsored riders sell their free bikes soon after their contract is up?
When you are barreling through turns 3-4 and your seatpost drops an inch, you'll hate a free bike :D |
http://ir.canterbury.ac.nz/bitstream...=1&isAllowed=y
Everyone will know about aerodynamic of trck cycling, but if you are interested in data, start reading the research from page 228. |
Most affordable powermeter in the market
PRECISION - 4iiii Innovations |
Originally Posted by gycho77
(Post 18517665)
http://ir.canterbury.ac.nz/bitstream...=1&isAllowed=y
Everyone will know about aerodynamic of trck cycling, but if you are interested in data, start reading the research from page 249.
Originally Posted by gycho77
(Post 18517677)
Most affordable powermeter in the market
PRECISION - 4iiii Innovations No mention if compatible with track cranks - only road and MTB cranks in the compatibility list. |
Originally Posted by Dalai
(Post 18517718)
If you find that journal article interesting, there is that study plus more journal articles in - http://www.bikeforums.net/track-cycl...-articles.html
Like Stages it is only left leg power only. No mention if compatible with track cranks - only road and MTB cranks in the compatibility list. One of us could ask 4iiii about track crank use.:) |
Originally Posted by Dalai
(Post 18517718)
No mention if compatible with track cranks - only road and MTB cranks in the compatibility list.
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I could "measure" your power output by watching your effort. That doesn't mean it's precise, accurate, or repeatable.
Just because it has the words "Power" and "Meter" in the product name doesn't necessarily mean it does what you think it does. |
Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 18517822)
I could "measure" your power output by watching your effort. That doesn't mean it's precise, accurate, or repeatable.
Just because it has the words "Power" and "Meter" in the product name doesn't necessarily mean it does what you think it does. Does anyone know if the 4iiii power meter is a supply your own crank-arm business model. I ask this since there doesn't seem to be price differentiation for the Shimano 105 vs. the Dura Ace. |
Originally Posted by dunderhi
(Post 18518247)
Are you words of warning for all power meters, crank arm power meters, or 4iiii's power meter?
Does anyone know if the 4iiii power meter is a supply your own crank-arm business model. I ask this since there doesn't seem to be price differentiation for the Shimano 105 vs. the Dura Ace. |
Was designed with the intention you could self install, but at the moment you need to send in your left crank arm for a factory installation...
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Originally Posted by dunderhi
(Post 18518247)
Are you words of warning for all power meters, crank arm power meters, or 4iiii's power meter?
Does anyone know if the 4iiii power meter is a supply your own crank-arm business model. I ask this since there doesn't seem to be price differentiation for the Shimano 105 vs. the Dura Ace. Remember, there is a Power Meter that measures wind and calculates the power output :D |
Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 18519133)
Remember, there is a Power Meter that measures wind and calculates the power output :D
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Originally Posted by dunderhi
(Post 18519150)
I'm new too all of this power training stuff, so I wasn't aware.
Track events are (obviously) much shorter. So, you want more accurate data more often. This is why the SRM is the gold standard for track. It samples (or used to) as fast as twice per second, for the not tech folks. So for a Flying 200 or 1K, you get a lot better sets of data than you would with others. Also, I don't like the 1 crank arm power meters. Yeah, on the road, you can assume that the output will average out. But, on the track, during a standing start, you are getting half of the data. If you can afford it, get a PM that measures from the crank spider. I'm not sure what the word is on pedal power meters these days. Are they getting better? On paper, they are superior to crank spider PMs because they are closer to the source of the power (your legs) and they are measuring left and right data independently. Plus they are easy to swap to other bikes. |
Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 18519821)
Also, I don't like the 1 crank arm power meters. Yeah, on the road, you can assume that the output will average out. But, on the track, during a standing start, you are getting half of the data.
Crank based ones to allow you to use any wheel you want. |
Originally Posted by taras0000
(Post 18519869)
SRM is a one crank PM. What's the difference if you measure at the crank or spider? Hub based in theory should be the most accurate. Also lots of room to house internals, therefore more complex computer, therefore higher sampling rate.
Crank based ones to allow you to use any wheel you want. The right crank arm mates with the spider with 3-4 screws (depending on your model): http://store.srm.de/media/catalog/pr.../1/5/159_3.jpg http://store.srm.de/media/catalog/pr.../1/5/159_2.jpg But, I see what you mean. The left crank arm moves torque through the bottom bracket then over to the right crank arm which then turns the spider. (these aren't exactly track parts, but they work for the illustration) SRM Crank arms: https://c2.staticflickr.com/6/5122/5...a7732e53cd.jpg Plus bottom bracket: http://www.velodromeshop.net/images/...bktshi2700.jpg Plus SRM spider: http://cdn.mos.bikeradar.com/images/...p82-500-70.jpg Equal: SRM Power Meter |
Originally Posted by taras0000
(Post 18519869)
SRM is a one crank PM. What's the difference if you measure at the crank or spider?
Crank arm photo on the scales is my photo Carleton :) |
Originally Posted by carleton
(Post 18519821)
If you can afford it, get a PM that measures from the crank spider.
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Originally Posted by Dalai
(Post 18520077)
Crank arm photo on the scales is my photo Carleton :)
Originally Posted by Banchad
(Post 18520093)
I can't, so I'm making one(for my dissertation).
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Originally Posted by Dalai
(Post 18520077)
Sensors on the left crank only deforms the strain gauges when pressure is applied to the left pedal. With the sensors on the spider, pressure on both pedals deform the strain gauges on the the spider - hence measures deflection from both pedals.
Crank arm photo on the scales is my photo Carleton :) |
Originally Posted by taras0000
(Post 18522476)
This just brought about a big face-palm for me. It's so obvious. I don't understand how I didn't figure this out myself. Frankly it's just as accurate as a hub based PM, it just doesn't take into account the minimal losses from the chain.
This is why SRM is considered better than PowerTap (measures at the hub). This is also why the promise of pedal sensors was so high, because they were closer to the body than crank arm, chainring spiders, and hubs as a measuring point. Then there was the PM that measured in the cleat. I think the cleat is as close as you can get and reliably measure force in 2 directions (downstroke and upstroke). The Power Meter shoe could work. But it would be undermined by the straps that sprinters use. Because when you use straps, the force added is applied to the bottom of the pedal. Not sure how a shoe power meter could measure that. |
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