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#1
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Could air density make this much difference?
I just moved from 5400 ft altitude to 700 ft. I've noticed about
a 15-25% decrease in performance or an equal amount of an increase in effort to equal my old levels. This is a measurement of speed, distance, cadence in average and maximums spread over a 3 week period. All other factors (my weight, % & grade of hills, road conditions, traffic, etc.) are equal. Could the lower, denser air be making that much difference or should I be inspecting my Bianchi for shipping damage? I gave it the once & twice over when it arrived and all seemed well. I've been too busy to take it to my LBS for a tune up/inspection. Ken |
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#2
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"Ken Bessler" wrote in news:2rrajiF1d5cfgU1@uni-
berlin.de: I just moved from 5400 ft altitude to 700 ft. I've noticed about a 15-25% decrease in performance or an equal amount of an increase in effort to equal my old levels. The thicker air at lower elevations will make a difference. Weather (heat and humidity) will also make a difference; less so after you get used to it. |
#3
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"Ken" wrote in message ... "Ken Bessler" wrote in news:2rrajiF1d5cfgU1@uni- berlin.de: I just moved from 5400 ft altitude to 700 ft. I've noticed about a 15-25% decrease in performance or an equal amount of an increase in effort to equal my old levels. The thicker air at lower elevations will make a difference. (clip) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ On the other hand, isn't it true that athletes often train at high altitude, and gain an advantage as the body adapts to aerobic output in the thinner air. I believe the blood gets thicker (so to speak.) Shouldn't this be working in your favor at the new low elevation? |
#4
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On Mon, 27 Sep 2004 20:25:18 +0000, Ken wrote:
"Ken Bessler" wrote in news:2rrajiF1d5cfgU1@uni- berlin.de: I just moved from 5400 ft altitude to 700 ft. I've noticed about a 15-25% decrease in performance or an equal amount of an increase in effort to equal my old levels. The thicker air at lower elevations will make a difference. Weather (heat and humidity) will also make a difference; less so after you get used to it. Hmmm. Training at altitude causes decrease in near sea-level performance? I go from the Piedmont area to the Beach and seem to notice a few percent increase in ability, though hard to discern from training variations (good day, bad day, etc.) Give it a week and if still having problems check the bike? shrug -B |
#5
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"Leo Lichtman" wrote in message ...
On the other hand, isn't it true that athletes often train at high altitude, and gain an advantage as the body adapts to aerobic output in the thinner air. Living at high altitude increases the oxygen-carrying capacity of your blood. It's like doping, but it's legal (today, anyway.) Training at high altitude decreases the effort you can put into training. This comes from reduced VO2 max, reduced cardiac output, and reduced tolerance for lactic acid buildup resulting in reduced anaerobic threshold, even after you've acclimated to the altitude. Reduced effort means reduced training and reduced strength. The trend today is "sleep high, train low." Many endurance athletes sleep in hypoxic tents to induce their bodies to produce EPO. RFM |
#6
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Badger_South wrote in message . ..
On Mon, 27 Sep 2004 20:25:18 +0000, Ken wrote: "Ken Bessler" wrote in news:2rrajiF1d5cfgU1@uni- berlin.de: I just moved from 5400 ft altitude to 700 ft. I've noticed about a 15-25% decrease in performance or an equal amount of an increase in effort to equal my old levels. The thicker air at lower elevations will make a difference. Weather (heat and humidity) will also make a difference; less so after you get used to it. Hmmm. Training at altitude causes decrease in near sea-level performance? I go from the Piedmont area to the Beach and seem to notice a few percent increase in ability, though hard to discern from training variations (good day, bad day, etc.) Give it a week and if still having problems check the bike? shrug -B No question you should see a performance boost when losing 5000' in altitude. Other wise Mt Everest would be easy and that bridge in Florida would be epic. |
#7
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Fritz M wrote:
Training at high altitude decreases the effort you can put into training. This comes from reduced VO2 max, reduced cardiac output, and reduced tolerance for lactic acid buildup resulting in reduced anaerobic threshold, even after you've acclimated to the altitude. Reduced effort means reduced training and reduced strength. It also increases calorie expenditure under heavy exhertion. About 22 kcal per hour per 100 feet altitude. I honestly have no idea why, that's just what "they" say. It could be as simple as the extra work your diaphragm gets, but you wouldn't think a 100-foot change would make that big a difference in that. Maybe your heart also has to start pumping faster because even with more lung activity you're getting less oxygen into the blood. So his loss of performance is probably not due to energetic limits. Maybe he's just riding uphill both ways. --Blair "Happens to me sometimes." |
#8
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Blair P. Houghton wrote:
Fritz M wrote: Training at high altitude decreases the effort you can put into training. This comes from reduced VO2 max, reduced cardiac output, and reduced tolerance for lactic acid buildup resulting in reduced anaerobic threshold, even after you've acclimated to the altitude. Reduced effort means reduced training and reduced strength. It also increases calorie expenditure under heavy exhertion. exertion --Blair "Maybe my head needs a new chain..." |
#9
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You sound like you might just be a pussy, Ken. Try pedaling harder.
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#10
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Ken, sometimes you might have a cold, you can have a bug or a cold for
a week or two, you may feel ok, but will ruin your athletic performance. Try taking a couple days off. |
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