Fitness Ramp Rate - Training Peaks
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Fitness Ramp Rate - Training Peaks
For those using Training Peaks, how useful to you is the Fitness Ramp Rate - the rate at which your "fitness" (chronic training load) is increasing?
February here in the SF Bay Area has been pretty nice, so I've been riding more hours -- about 12 hours per week, easy to moderate pace. But this year, I want to be smart (for once) about not ramping up the volume too quickly.
Joe Friel's article says that the "correct ramp rate" of about 5-8 points is about right for most people, with 10 about the upper limit:
My 7-day ramp has been about 9 points for about 3 weeks, and I feel great. So maybe I'm overthinking this.
Thoughts?
February here in the SF Bay Area has been pretty nice, so I've been riding more hours -- about 12 hours per week, easy to moderate pace. But this year, I want to be smart (for once) about not ramping up the volume too quickly.
Joe Friel's article says that the "correct ramp rate" of about 5-8 points is about right for most people, with 10 about the upper limit:
If you go much beyond a week at 10 or more weekly CTL ramp rate and the outcomes arent likely to be as beneficial.
Thoughts?
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Alan Couzens, who, I think, tends to shoot from the hip, says anything more than 0.5 is unsustainable over some unspecified period. I'm happy when mine is positive, but the duration is clearly critical.
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I've thought a bit about this. First, if you're feeling good, I don't think there's an obvious problem; it's when you start to feel not good that you may have a problem. Second, I think it's not just the slope of the CTL, it's also the level. A high rate when your CTL is already high might be different than a high rate when your CTL is low. Third, there's some room for fine-tuning the "time constant" (i.e., the decay rate).
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I've thought a bit about this. First, if you're feeling good, I don't think there's an obvious problem; it's when you start to feel not good that you may have a problem. Second, I think it's not just the slope of the CTL, it's also the level. A high rate when your CTL is already high might be different than a high rate when your CTL is low. Third, there's some room for fine-tuning the "time constant" (i.e., the decay rate).
Good point about the ramp rate in relation to absolute CTL or, more importantly, actual fitness. Obviously, the fitter you are the more ramp you can tolerate.
The CTL time constant? How is that related to the maximum tolerable ramp?
Last edited by MoAlpha; 02-14-23 at 11:42 AM.
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When Andy first proposed the PMC system, he suggested a CTL decay rate of 1/42 = 0.024 (or a half life of about 4 weeks) but he suggested that there should be more research on that and that the decay rates (for both ATL and CTL) might differ across individuals. The "ramp rate" when increasing load will depend on how quickly it "naturally" decays.
(The ATL "time constant" is 7, so the decay rates is 1/7 = 0.142, or a half life of about 5 days).
(The ATL "time constant" is 7, so the decay rates is 1/7 = 0.142, or a half life of about 5 days).
Last edited by RChung; 02-14-23 at 11:54 AM.
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When Andy first proposed the PMC system, he suggested a CTL decay rate of 1/42 = 0.024 (or a half life of about 4 weeks) but he suggested that there should be more research on that and that the decay rates (for both ATL and CTL) might differ across individuals. The "ramp rate" when increasing load will depend on how quickly it "naturally" decays.
Too bad no one will fund good studies to validate and track the relevant biomarkers for these things.
Last edited by MoAlpha; 02-14-23 at 12:09 PM.
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I think some people have done some work on trying to estimate individual decay rates but to be frank I've never closely read that stuff so I don't know how well it works. But I like the general big picture idea of it.
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So if I'm reading the comments above correctly, a higher ramp rate may be more tolerable at lower early-season CTL levels than, say midseason when you're higher on the curve, and your volume/intensity is greater.
Kind of in line with the steep fitness gains one sees when detrained, followed by the flattening of the curve as fitness improves, and it becomes progressively harder to induce gains.
Makes sense, I guess.
Kind of in line with the steep fitness gains one sees when detrained, followed by the flattening of the curve as fitness improves, and it becomes progressively harder to induce gains.
Makes sense, I guess.
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I don't think you're missing anything subtle. CTL will differ, so (almost always) the rate of change in CTL will differ. But empirically, we're probably talking a couple of points one way or the other. I was just bringing it up because Terry says Friel advises keeping below 8 and Terry is seeing 9.
I think some people have done some work on trying to estimate individual decay rates but to be frank I've never closely read that stuff so I don't know how well it works. But I like the general big picture idea of it.
I think some people have done some work on trying to estimate individual decay rates but to be frank I've never closely read that stuff so I don't know how well it works. But I like the general big picture idea of it.

Last edited by MoAlpha; 02-14-23 at 03:26 PM.
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So if I'm reading the comments above correctly, a higher ramp rate may be more tolerable at lower early-season CTL levels than, say midseason when you're higher on the curve, and your volume/intensity is greater.
Kind of in line with the steep fitness gains one sees when detrained, followed by the flattening of the curve as fitness improves, and it becomes progressively harder to induce gains.
Makes sense, I guess.
Kind of in line with the steep fitness gains one sees when detrained, followed by the flattening of the curve as fitness improves, and it becomes progressively harder to induce gains.
Makes sense, I guess.
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Does anybody check pulse and blood pressure in the morning to see how well they've recovered from the efforts the day before? Long before any of these plans, we used that to see when we needed a rest or easy day.
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Not much. Heart rate variability is a more sensitive, direct, and better validated readout of autonomic nervous system status than HR or BP.
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It being Training Peaks, the general idea is to train for a peak. I guess. That's my approach. It follows that, if one has a fair bit of experience in doing this, one knows what one's CTL should be, say a month out from the Big Event. So then you look at your current CTL and do some math. I rather think it's a good idea, for a geezer like me anyway, to not hold a high CTL for a long period. Takes a lot of work to keep it up there. My usual practice is to limit my rise to about 3 points/week, knowing that there will be times when I'll lose fitness for various reasons, some seen, some unforeseen, along with some easy weeks. Anyway, I like a long steady ramp. It's served me well.
This year is anomalous for me because of my little health issue. I'm running about 4 months behind my usual schedule. Once, maybe 20 years ago, I took the whole fall off and didn't start training until January. That was a disaster. My current CTL is 27 and I hope to peak at 65-70 in mid-summer. Maybe..
This year is anomalous for me because of my little health issue. I'm running about 4 months behind my usual schedule. Once, maybe 20 years ago, I took the whole fall off and didn't start training until January. That was a disaster. My current CTL is 27 and I hope to peak at 65-70 in mid-summer. Maybe..
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Yes, thats how they say to track it. Lots of fitness geeks (including long-suffering spouse and I) use this: https://www.hrv4training.com/
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Yes, thats how they say to track it. Lots of fitness geeks (including long-suffering spouse and I) use this: https://www.hrv4training.com/
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I have over 2000 daily HRV readings. I take them with Elite HRV on my phone and my Polar watch, just to check and because the watch gives me an accurate number for resting-standing minus resting-lying. For some reason, with age my morning resting HR has become mostly useless as a check, so I added HRV. I'd give it a C for usefulness, but I do it anyway. TSB is a better guide for me. One thing the Elite app has done very well is to predict the onset of PMR, twice. When my parasympathetic power goes in the toilet, I'm about to have a problem. Otherwise it's rather a crapshoot. Of course that's just me. I'm probably not a good case study.
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I have over 2000 daily HRV readings. I take them with Elite HRV on my phone and my Polar watch, just to check and because the watch gives me an accurate number for resting-standing minus resting-lying. For some reason, with age my morning resting HR has become mostly useless as a check, so I added HRV. I'd give it a C for usefulness, but I do it anyway. TSB is a better guide for me. One thing the Elite app has done very well is to predict the onset of PMR, twice. When my parasympathetic power goes in the toilet, I'm about to have a problem. Otherwise it's rather a crapshoot. Of course that's just me. I'm probably not a good case study.
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Couzens recommends no more than 5 CTL points per week for elite riders.
Adding 9 TSS per week to a rider with a CTL of 150-200 is trivial (5-6%) whereas it would cripple a 40 CTL rider, eventually.
WRT to the time constants, I had found that they did not represent my decay in my late 50's and I monkeyed around with them until they matched my HRV, mood, and general feeling of fatigue. I sent a note to Andrew Coggan and he graciously responded and if my memory serves, he said older fit riders can have different constants from the typical ones used by TP.
What I found worked for me was a constant of 10 IIRC with a 10 day Micro cycle and every 20 days (2 cycles), I would do 5 days easy as rest and then another 2 cycles of 10 days each. Very odd but it worked. I would be careful ramping too quickly
Adding 9 TSS per week to a rider with a CTL of 150-200 is trivial (5-6%) whereas it would cripple a 40 CTL rider, eventually.
WRT to the time constants, I had found that they did not represent my decay in my late 50's and I monkeyed around with them until they matched my HRV, mood, and general feeling of fatigue. I sent a note to Andrew Coggan and he graciously responded and if my memory serves, he said older fit riders can have different constants from the typical ones used by TP.
What I found worked for me was a constant of 10 IIRC with a 10 day Micro cycle and every 20 days (2 cycles), I would do 5 days easy as rest and then another 2 cycles of 10 days each. Very odd but it worked. I would be careful ramping too quickly
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WRT to the time constants, I had found that they did not represent my decay in my late 50's and I monkeyed around with them until they matched my HRV, mood, and general feeling of fatigue. I sent a note to Andrew Coggan and he graciously responded and if my memory serves, he said older fit riders can have different constants from the typical ones used by TP.
What I found worked for me was a constant of 10 IIRC with a 10 day Micro cycle and every 20 days (2 cycles), I would do 5 days easy as rest and then another 2 cycles of 10 days each. Very odd but it worked. I would be careful ramping too quickly
What I found worked for me was a constant of 10 IIRC with a 10 day Micro cycle and every 20 days (2 cycles), I would do 5 days easy as rest and then another 2 cycles of 10 days each. Very odd but it worked. I would be careful ramping too quickly
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My tracker (Fitbit) automatically tracks resting HR and HRV. I find both to be a useful guide to my recovery, especially resting HR. I'm still fairly new to HRV, but for me the correlation with fatigue is less clear. For example if my resting HR jumps more than 5 beats/sec above normal I'm usually either fatigued or getting sick. At peak fitness and freshness it always drops down to the same base level. HRV on the other hand is less predictable for me, although it does tend to drop with fatigue. I know Whoop is big on HRV and puts it front and centre, but I'm not convinced. I actually like Fitbit's readiness score balanced more evenly on HRV, sleep and activity.
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Digression . . . but just another good use of HRV. Keeps track of all sorts of things.
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IRL I work on renewal models of various forms so when Andy first proposed his PMC (ATL, CTL, and TSB) I recognized it as a renewal model and, of course, I was both charmed and appalled.
200 CTL is a lot.
I think it makes sense that not everyone "renews" at the same rate, so one should pay attention to how the default "time constants" fit your particular situation. I think the first thing is to keep good records of your mood, motivation, and fatigue or session RPE. Using an ATL time constant of 10 is equivalent to lengthening the ATL half-life to a week.
200 CTL is a lot.
I think it makes sense that not everyone "renews" at the same rate, so one should pay attention to how the default "time constants" fit your particular situation. I think the first thing is to keep good records of your mood, motivation, and fatigue or session RPE. Using an ATL time constant of 10 is equivalent to lengthening the ATL half-life to a week.
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