“A little change here….
….. and there and you can go a fraction of a per cent faster. But if you
improve lots of little things, it adds up to a tangible figure, a serious
improvement. That’s my philosophy.”
No, no, not Dave Brailsford, but me in an interview for the UEA campus newspaper in September 1995!
I’ve always raced on a budget, especially
when I was a skint student at UEA. Racing with homemade stuff and turning up to
chilly races wearing a pair of your mum’s old black tights etc etc. For two years running the UEA Cycling Club
won more medals at the BUSA’s than any other club and so I was lucky enough to
get a couple of bursaries from UEA to upgrade some of my dodgy equipment. Even so, I still made the dosh go a loooong
way.
Not quite that skint these days but I’m still
thrifty and aim to get the biggest bang for my buck. I’ll never be good enough to be able to
justify putting a £5000 TT bike together, in fact I’ve begrudged spending any
money on kit since my comeback because I just haven’t had the health &
fitness to get the best from it.
However, the old ‘engine’ is sorted now and I’ve
learned from my mistakes in overtraining last winter, so I’m looking forward to
some quick rides in 2013. So, perhaps time now to start looking at those
‘marginal gains’ once again?
Bodyweight
It’s virtually impossible to state someone’s
ideal racing weight off the top of your head. Painfully stick thin obviously
isn’t good, neither is being four stone overweight. Words of wisdom I heard from sports scientist
were, “Look back and find out at which
weight you went the best and aim for that. That’s your optimum racing weight!”
Simple really. Too skinny gets your CdA right
down but you will lose power. Too fat whacks your CdA up substantially. I used
to go well at just a smidge under 11 stone but that seems scarily lean for a 43
year old! I’ll aim for 11 ½ initially and see how scary I look!
CdA
Apart from reducing my profile by shedding
the lard, I can do a lot better on my position. I had all sorts of issues
trying to lever the power from my puny body and had to compromise things a lot
but I can probably go more aero now. I especially want to pull my elbows much
closer together and round my shoulders more.
This shot shows that my elbows & upper arms are well outside the
line of my legs & knees. That can’t be good.
I've also seen some research describing the
drag reducing effect of filling in the pointy bit at the back of your aero head
fairing. Mine is currently open but I will close it in with some spare
polystyrene sheet left over from the DIY disc wheel!
Bike
Fairly happy with the frame – again, unless
I’m getting up into the 50kmh regime, I don’t think spending £1000’s is worth
it. I do like those cheap carbon Chinese TT frames though, in fact I’ve heard
lots of nice things about them. If I get a spare £400, I may treat myself…
Wheels
and tyres
I still love my Spinergy Rev X wheels – I
don’t care what people say, even after all these years they are still up there
as one of the most aero wheels ever made. I’ve still got a 1990 something RTTC
handbook with a picture of Richard Prebble on the front riding to National TT
titles on a pair! I’m not prepared to
fork out a grand for a rear disc wheel – my homemade one is 90% as good as a
top spec bought one, although I’m lightening it & modifying it
substantially for 2013 (so I can use it in the rain without worrying about the
glue dissolving!!)
Tyres are a different matter however.
I used to be in charge of a project recycling
vehicle tyres and so am very aware as to how the design affects the performance
& durability (Ever tried dismantling a 747 tyre without resorting to
nuclear fission? Forget it!). Anyway, because I’ve not been going very well,
I’ve just shod the TT bike in whatever comes to hand cheap on Ebay. Not any
more! This is quite a good piece of independent research showing the rolling resistances of most 700c tyres out
there.
To my great surprise, the tyre on the front
wheel of my bike comes out at #8 on the list – result! However, the tyres on
the rear Rev X and the disc are waaaay down the bottom, bloody crap in
fact. So replace those with something
with much better performance, plus latex tubes and that’s a good handful of
watts saved.
Tada!
So, there are my proposed ‘marginal gains’
for 2013. I have hardly spent a thing
but there are a good handful of watts saved.
I reckon about £4 per watt saved in fact.
Bargain!
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