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#1
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3 mile Muni vs 30 mile Cokering for exercise
I'm just wondering about the the exercise factor when it comes to, say a 30 mile coker ride along a mostly flat, smooth bike path that takes about 3 - 3 1/2 hours to complete at a fairly consistent but comfortable speed, vs a 3 mile, extremely technical, all out MUni ride that takes only about 35 minutes to complete. So for 35 minutes, I've got my heart rate near maximum, and I'm doing some very steep ups & downs, working very hard and feeling like I'm getting a substantial workout. Then, on another day, I'm taking it pretty easy on the coker, doing 30 miles on flat, smooth ground and hardly even working up a sweat. So, If I were to do this type of MUni or Coker for 5 days per week, which ride would be more physically benificial overall? Of course, the ideal, imo, would be to alternate *both* types of riding, maybe Muni 3 days and coker 2, but I'm just curious so I thought I'd ask opinions. -- MuniAddict "On Earth it would be...12 noon" (Twilight zone episode, "To serve man.") My Videos: http://youtube.com/profile_videos?user=ttt8699 My favorite FG clip: http://tinyurl.com/28847b ------------------------------------------------------------------------ MuniAddict's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/12920 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/61560 Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
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#2
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3 mile Muni vs 30 mile Cokering for exercise
muni would definitely be the better workout from your options. however if you stepped up the speed and effort put into your coker ride, then you could make it pretty even. i would say alternate though, hard muni on monday, wednesday, and friday, easier cokering on tuesday and thursday. -- zfreak220 '4-7-2007 RIP Johnny Hart' (http://tinyurl.com/3ykmht) KH fund: $166.33/$371.49-$205.16 left (If AE bike will still sell them that low) or DX fund: $166.33/$249.99-$83.66 left ------------------------------------------------------------------------ zfreak220's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/11948 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/61560 Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#3
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3 mile Muni vs 30 mile Cokering for exercise
theoretically, the coker ride would be better to build up your cardiovascular health. On the other hand, the 30 minutes of muni is more likely to build muscular strength. It all depends on what you're trying to accomplish. -- banjo_gun_snake_wheels John ------------------------------------------------------------------------ banjo_gun_snake_wheels's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/15039 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/61560 Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#4
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3 mile Muni vs 30 mile Cokering for exercise
banjo_gun_snake_wheels wrote: theoretically, the coker ride would be better to build up your cardiovascular health. On the other hand, the 30 minutes of muni is more likely to build muscular strength. It all depends on what you're trying to accomplish. Mostly "overall" benefits. On the coker rides we've been maitaining an average speed of about 10 mph, with (infrequent) max's up around 15 mph. Overall, the coker ride is pretty non-strenuous. The MUni is no doubt great cardio, as I mentioned my heart rate gets up to near maximum at times, and averages well above 150. And yes, I'm sure it builds muscle strength, as well as being a great "core" builder. I was mainly wondering if the two very different workouts would be similar in physical benifit as one is relatively short, but very strenuous, while the other is very long but much less strenuous. -- MuniAddict "On Earth it would be...12 noon" (Twilight zone episode, "To serve man.") My Videos: http://youtube.com/profile_videos?user=ttt8699 My favorite FG clip: http://tinyurl.com/28847b ------------------------------------------------------------------------ MuniAddict's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/12920 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/61560 Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#5
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3 mile Muni vs 30 mile Cokering for exercise
MuniAddict wrote: Overall, the coker ride is pretty non-strenuous. I think you've answered your own question here. Just my view, but repetition does little for fitness if it's not accompanied by cardio workout. If your 30 mile coker ride includes powering up a few hills, intervals style, so you get your heart rate into a higher zone, then you might have a better comparison. But if you're "Sunday Driving" on your Coker, fuggetaboutit. I proved this to myself after some great training advice from Nathan H: "train the hills, and the distance will take care of itself." The first year I did the MS 150, I trained a boatload of miles, mostly on flat trails. Got to the event, and the hills killed me. The next year, I spent most of my training time working hills, not paying as much attention to distance. Got to the event, and not only rode further than ever before, but pounded all the hills that gave me a hard time the year prior. -- tomblackwood Tailgate at your own risk... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ tomblackwood's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/3762 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/61560 Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#6
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3 mile Muni vs 30 mile Cokering for exercise
tomblackwood wrote: I think you've answered your own question here. Just my view, but repetition does little for fitness if it's not accompanied by cardio workout. If your 30 mile coker ride includes powering up a few hills, intervals style, so you get your heart rate into a higher zone, then you might have a better comparison. But if you're "Sunday Driving" on your Coker, fuggetaboutit. I proved this to myself after some great training advice from Nathan H: "train the hills, and the distance will take care of itself." The first year I did the MS 150, I trained a boatload of miles, mostly on flat trails. Got to the event, and the hills killed me. The next year, I spent most of my training time working hills, not paying as much attention to distance. Got to the event, and not only rode further than ever before, but pounded all the hills that gave me a hard time the year prior. Yeah, 100% of my cokering will pretty much be ridden on the 50 miles (25 each way) of beautiful bike path that stretches from Malibu to Torrance, CA! It's not an endurance test really for anything but my crotch! Still i can't help thinking that the _many_ _thousands_ of revolutions covering 30 miles would *still* provide at least some physical benifit. If not, then I guess I'm just "spinning my wheels!" -- MuniAddict "On Earth it would be...12 noon" (Twilight zone episode, "To serve man.") My Videos: http://youtube.com/profile_videos?user=ttt8699 My favorite FG clip: http://tinyurl.com/28847b ------------------------------------------------------------------------ MuniAddict's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/12920 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/61560 Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#7
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3 mile Muni vs 30 mile Cokering for exercise
I think the muni would be a "better" workout if you had to pick just one. 30 minutes out on the trails and you can be assured I've used a lot more muscles than I would had I ridden on a smooth street. Just think about what it does for your core and arms. Especially when you probably freemount a lot more often on the trails than on the street. And even when I am in the woods out of the sun I sweat a lot more and breath a lot heavier. I think pavement riding can be really beneficial to your cardio depending on the level you take it. To make it a better workout though the route should include hills like Tomblackwood mentioned. It should also include plenty of turns (speaking from experience from riding straight smooth rail trails here.. very few turns at all ), and I would think every now and then dismounting and mounting again as part of the training. but I'm really just throwing out stuff from my own limited experience. edited to add: of course we are talking about Terry.. someone experienced at unicycling on the street and on the trails. A "ride in the park" for some of us once upon a time WAS a tremendous workout. I remember my heart beating in my throat numerous times as I just tried to stay up!" So judging the workout also would have to include not just what workout.. but whose.. -- Unibugg Into the blue wrote: You should see this fella ride up kerbs. He makes it look annoyingly easy. Ants make me UPD. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Unibugg's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/14480 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/61560 Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#8
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3 mile Muni vs 30 mile Cokering for exercise
Unibugg wrote: I think the muni would be a "better" workout if you had to pick just one. 30 minutes out on the trails and you can be assured I've used a lot more muscles than I would had I ridden on a smooth street. Just think about what it does for your core and arms. Especially when you probably freemount a lot more often on the trails than on the street. And even when I am in the woods out of the sun I sweat a lot more and breath a lot heavier. I think pavement riding can be really beneficial to your cardio depending on the level you take it. To make it a better workout though the route should include hills like Tomblackwood mentioned. It should also include plenty of turns (speaking from experience from riding straight smooth rail trails here.. very few turns at all ), and I would think every now and then dismounting and mounting again as part of the training. but I'm really just throwing out stuff from my own limited experience. edited to add: of course we are talking about Terry.. someone experienced at unicycling on the street and on the trails. A "ride in the park" for some of us once upon a time WAS a tremendous workout. I remember my heart beating in my throat numerous times as I just tried to stay up!" So judging the workout also would have to include not just what workout.. but whose.. Thanks for all the informative replies all! Well, since there the (long) bike path is virtually level all the way, with no hard turns, I'll just have to throw in a few more fast sprints in the 14-17 mph range! Of course we do stop from time to time to take breaks, eat a snack and "adjust" things. -- MuniAddict "On Earth it would be...12 noon" (Twilight zone episode, "To serve man.") My Videos: http://youtube.com/profile_videos?user=ttt8699 My favorite FG clip: http://tinyurl.com/28847b ------------------------------------------------------------------------ MuniAddict's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/12920 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/61560 Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#9
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3 mile Muni vs 30 mile Cokering for exercise
Hey Terry, I'm think I'm going to say that, though the coker ride would be better for cardio, the muni ride would probably take the coker ride in terms of brute short-term power output training. They're really two completely different kinds of training. When I'm on my bike I'll easily go 90-100 miles, but those 90-100 miles are in a gear where I actually have some good resistance, allowing me to put out 180-220 watts for an extended period of time, which is where the workout is. My heart rate may only be 120-140 the whole time, but it's definitely raised, and I'm definitely hammering pretty hard to keep speed up. I would say that a long bike ride like that is definitely more similar to the coker ride than the muni ride, but on the coker, you're stuck in a 36-inch "gear", probably limited to 50-70 watts of average wheel-to-ground power output, plus maybe 20-30% extra effort in order to keep your balance. On the bike you can hang in the 30s-40s for climbing (high cadence, power-spin!), 80s for flat speed, and even 100-140 if you're feeling like a god for the moment, allowing you to actually crank out more physical work, in the strictest sense, force-distance units at your pedals. On the coker, without getting your cadence through the roof, it's impossible to work yourself out! That said, I think the coker ride is mostly useless unless you either put in long, long distance or get a Schlumpf hub and frame and ride in 54" mode to force yourself put out more power. Riding a unicycle cruelly limits you in how hard you can work yourself at reasonable cadences. Go geared (which, even then, may not be enough) or climb hills. You'll need to find the right hill for optimum effect because you can't shift. In a 36" gear, probably an 8-10-percent grade, six or so if your strength isn't quite there yet; that's what you'd want to do if you're going to train road. If you do do that... climb hills all the time, etc, you'll have legs of steel and will be able to power through just about anything at really high output for a long time. Which brings me to the muni ride... My problem with the muni ride is that it's only 35 minutes long. Granted, it may be an (exceptionally!) intense 35 minutes, but as far as a "workout" goes, it should be far longer, probably at least into the 1-2 hour range. The muni ride will get your heart rate up into the sky, but it's because you're doing obstacles, rough stuff, pounding all over the place, standing up, etc. The muni ride will really help your ability to maintain fast, intense stuff for minutes at a time (like, if you're going to max yourself out for three to five minutes at a time), but I wouldn't say it would increase your ability to simply put out RAW POWER at any time you need it. It's great general conditioning, but you're not going to become a mad sprinter or hill climber doing it. Thing is... if you DO become a great sprinter or mad hill climber, what the muni riding will do for you is to allow you to get your heart rate down more quickly after powering, and it will allow you to keep up an almost-sprint level of output for much longer. You actual ability to crank out power at any given time, though, like, how hard you can push when you're fresh, and what kind of foot-on-pedal force from your leg relates to what kind of perceived effort in your brain, will come from high-gear/uphill coker riding (or, if you really want a quantifiably intense road-based workout, a road bike where you can always choose a hard/optimal gear for good resistance at high cadence). Unless you're climbing, on a coker, you can have all the cadence you want, but you're not going to get the ability to acutally push hard at that cadence, because a 36" wheel (and perhaps even a 54") just isn't big enough. The 54 would definitely be big enough to get you a good long-distance flat-ground aerobic workout though, if cadence stays up. I'm sorry I'm so long winded... I've thought about this a lot myself (and actually experimented with it and spoken with a bunch of people about it). But my basic point is... think about what kind of absolute foot-to-pedal wattage feels like in terms of the way you perceive how "hard you're pushing"... that's going to be amped up by doing hills on your coker. Now think about, when you open your throttle and start powering for a given amount of time, how long it takes you to feel the burn in your lungs, heart, head, (and perhaps legs, but not always) and at what level of fatigue you let yourself crack; the muni riding will postpone that burn and allow you to put up with more of it before your body's incessant, most likely painful, complaining forces your mind to give it a rest. If you can, climb hills in a tough (but aerobically friendly) gear on your road bike (if you have one) and keep your RPM up with a heavy gear. Do that a lot, and that'd be even better than the coker riding for upping your ability to just put out power. If you're going to rely on muni riding for core strength and cardio (which is what I think it's best for, contrary to muscle, as many here have said... unless there is substantial climbing) then I'd make sure the muni ride lasts at least an hour, preferably an hour and a half or two, and keep your heart rate above 130 the whole time with a break in the middle... maybe 5 or 10 minutes at 130 and 5 or 10 minutes at 160-170 if the terrain will allow you to manage getting your heart rate that high (flat terrain, unless you're really spinning FAST, won't and shouldn't get your heart rate to 170). That's really good core and cardio, and the punishment will allow you to take more in the future. If you're wanting to increase how much power output you get out a given perceived effort, ride your coker on as many hills as you can find, or grab a road bike and shove it in a good gear (probably better than the coker). The best RPMs to do that in are in the 80-100 range, so just take as hard a gear as you can possibly do without letting your cadence drop below 80 or so. Likewise, if you're on a coker, take as hard a hill as you can without letting your cadence drop. And when I say hill, I mean at least a half mile or so, though one and a half to three would be better. Going for a flat coker ride with three or four 200-yard hills isn't going to get you very far. If your cadence goes too low during a climb, shift down! And if you're already in first gear and your cadence drops uncontrollably, go home! And if you're on your coker and your cadence hits rock bottom, suck it up or find a shallower grade. (But always make sure you're on a steep enough hill to have to crank the pedals to keep your cadence going... it shouldn't feel like it's going by itself.) That will get your legs beefed up in a hurry, so that you'll get a bunch of power for what doesn't feel like much effort. Then the muni riding can make it so you can use that power-power-power repeatedly without bonking halfway through your ride. Okay, I'm done now, I promise. All that said, I'd alternate the ride. Longer muni ride, steeper or geared up coker ride. They both have their place, they both will help you out if you do them right, and, they're both probably buttloads of fun! -- chuckaeronut ------------------------------------------------------------------------ chuckaeronut's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/14677 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/61560 Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#10
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3 mile Muni vs 30 mile Cokering for exercise
I know that I've essentially argued that muni is better for cardio and road is better for muscle, but if you want something smooth and great for cardio, road is the way to go. Just go longer and flatter! And muni with mad hilliage could be just as good as road for sheer power output, but the hills would have to be very long and more or less regular in order to peg yourself at your aerobic threshold. I'd say, though, that finding a good long hill and cokering up it at high cadence with good force would be better than most muni, because the hills are shorter and more breaks are taken because of falls, rocks, hops, etc, all of which get your heart rate up, but let your legs rest. It all just depends on what you want to do. For strength and ability to crank HARD, make sure to keep your force*cadence up without stopping whether you're on road or mountain (but road is more conducive to that kind of activity), and for heart rate, just punish yourself on your muni. That'll allow you to just suck sh*t up and keep powering with side cramps, a burning heart, and a chest that's about to collapse. But the powering comes from consistent, long-ish streams of power output, which is far less likely to be interrupted on a road hill than on a trail. -- chuckaeronut ------------------------------------------------------------------------ chuckaeronut's Profile: http://www.unicyclist.com/profile/14677 View this thread: http://www.unicyclist.com/thread/61560 Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
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