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#286 | |
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Community Team
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Newport, South Wales
Posts: 3,830
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Quote:
increasing mass via e.g., weight training, actually causes a relative decrease in mitochondrial and capillary density. this is one reason why weights (to increase endurance cycling performance) is a waste of time. this has been mentioned on numerous occasions throughout this and other threads. ric
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#287 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 1,075
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Quote:
Researchers had them do six months of either endurance training or weight training. After six months, the quadriceps muscles in the weight-training group showed large improvements in oxidative capacity and had more mitochondria. Mitochondria are the main source of energy to the cell. If you have more mitochondria, (which are increased through exercise) then your muscle can get more energy and a more powerful muscle contraction. The subjects also had an increase in the muscle size. but i guess it depends upon on what you define as weight training, in the sence of power lifting or weights of higher repetitions such as supersets supersets wouldn't at 65% high repetitions, or circuit training with weights. ohh another random link.. http://www.pponline.co.uk/encyc/0129.htm ohhh increased by the hormone thyroxin from iodine by the thyroid.... "t3 + t4 it don't increase, density or help assist speed up metabolism, thats experiments in rats and birds we aren't rats are birds there musscle fibres aren't like ours there made up different"... i'll save you the typing hey! Last edited by closesupport : 27-09.-2004 at 05:28 AM. |
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#288 | |
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Community Team
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Newport, South Wales
Posts: 3,830
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Quote:
apologies, i was talking about trained and/or elite cyclists (i.e., those that race). this study, if memory serves me correctly was untrained individuals, where any exercise helps increase pereformance in (e.g.) cycling ric
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#289 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 1,075
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ohh and the link was rats used during experiments, if you look down the left hand side there a number of links to sports, and performance regiems. eg... cycling / interval training ..............etc read this as weight training....... http://www.pponline.co.uk/encyc/0106.htm Last edited by closesupport : 27-09.-2004 at 07:16 AM. |
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#290 | |
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Community Team
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Newport, South Wales
Posts: 3,830
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Quote:
i suggest you either bother to read this thread and the others (to do with weights, gym work, strength training etc) in their entirety and look for postings by 2Lap, Roadie Scum, Andy Coggan, and myself or look at the peer reviewed literature that pertains to trained cyclists and additionally understand first principles. ric
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#291 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 1,075
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Quote:
thats just it i do understand! i know how it works. i've been doing it for the past 10yrs plus, cycling, running + weight circuits, i earlier came back from a ride of 65miles in little over 3hrs, however i did have to drop the pace not only for headwinds but also because i had managed to get lost and couldn't remember where i had come from. Don't tell me i'm wrong or it don't work, it does and has for me! ohhh if the cyclist that gave me directions earlier that pointed me in the right direction is reading, thankyou very much i made it home. 15miles more than planned but what the hell, could have done with another bottle. |
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#292 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 1,075
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Quote:
![]() Last edited by closesupport : 27-09.-2004 at 09:02 AM. |
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#293 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Posts: 246
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Quote:
And by discounting I mean that he thinks that the best, if not the only, way is through riding. When he says things like "even a 55-year old grandmother has all the strength they will ever need for cycling" (paraphrasing) it's pretty apparent how black and white his views are. |
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#294 | |
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Community Team
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Newport, South Wales
Posts: 3,830
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Quote:
i'm talking about the literature that refers to weights etc and trained cyclists, and the underlying principles involved. if you think i'm posting misinformation then you don't have a good understanding of the work in this area, which doesn't surprise me considering that you think your diet is good (your wife is correct). i suggest you go back and read some of the earlier pages of this thread especially those around page 5 and 6, where we talk more about the mechanisms involved (see posts by Roadie Scum, Andy Coggan, and myself). If you search through the archives of this forum and look for posts by 2Lap as well. ric
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#295 | ||||||
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Community Team
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Newport, South Wales
Posts: 3,830
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Quote:
i've said the best way is to ride a bike, because this is true. i've also said that if you can't ride your bike then any exercise is better than no exercise. however, you'd be far better off doing an aerobic exercise (e.g., running) versus something like weights. Quote:
if you're referring to weights and injury prevention then as i've pointed out the data is very equivocal on this. Quote:
Lol! i don't think you've read my posts correctly! Quote:
i've never said you can't do these things - all i've said is that in trained cyclists they do not increase performance, because simply they don't. training in one modality does not transfer well to a completely different one. of course, as i have mentioned on many occasions, if for some reason you can't cycle due to e.g., inclement weather then any exercise is better than (periods) of no exercise. Quote:
this is because the best way of developing the most power for endurance cycling performance (e.g., TT, RR, MTB XC, track endurance etc) is through on the bike training. feel free to exercise in other modalities, but for trained and elite cyclists (i.e., those that race) the best way is through on the bike training, with other modalities not increasing performance or even impairing cycle performance (obviously, if another exercise mode is your only option then it's better than no exercise at all). Quote:
I actually said that frail old ladies were the exception. ric
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#296 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: dublin ireland
Posts: 421
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Quote:
It depends on how you interpret his statements. What he writes about power training is true but only if you have the safe pedalling technique for such training as it protects the lower back. Remember, that 55 or 85 year old grandmother has enough power in her leg to support her own weight when walking or climbing a stairs; a cyclist uses far less pedal pressure once initial acceleration is complete and that can be done out of the saddle. (Track sprinters are excluded because for them the mashing style is a necessity.) |
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#297 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 37
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Quote:
What about in criteriums or attacks on hills on the flat, exiting corners when you need to accellerate hard to catch up with other riders. How big are the forces you would use then? Regards, Mark |
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#298 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 694
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I have a feeling this thread is destined to stay at the top of discussion...
First I need to give a little of my background. I've spent the vast majority of my life weight training. It has been on again off again for sure but that doesn't detract from the overall gains, as well as the experience(s) it's given me. For me, it's been a fabulous way to feel better, feel stronger, stay healthier (mentally and physicallya), etc. I'd also like to say that I've never participated in any steroid use, or any other performance enhancing drug either. I used to play raquetball for my aerobic exercise, which worked okay. I also use to spend some time on a recumbent stationary bike. No SERIOUS aerobic exercise though, at least as a rule. Now to cycling... As of 7/16 of this year, I've taken up cycling. I've done it before, but only sporadically. I've never looked at it seriously. My career has become one in which I spend most of my time sitting on my arse and quite frankly, I just needed something to do in order to get more exercise. Since then, I've cycled approximately 800 miles (300 on trainer, 500 on the road). I can EASILY say that no exercise I've ever done makes me feel better than bicycling. I have more energy than I know what to do with. I'm up at 5am every morning basically looking for things to do. It's been a LONG time since I felt that way. I'm getting off the subject so.... I understand that cycling is about power, and the ability of the rider to generate power. I've also read the statement that muscular strength, or the ability to create force against the pedals, has nothing to do with generating that power. I've having a really hard time buying/understanding this. I DO understand that weight training/bicycling are very different exercise and that while they may use the same muscles, they don't necessarily use the same muscle fibers. I THINK I understand that the muscle fibers used primarily (slow twitch) are much more affected by aerobic capacity than by any short term strength gains. Is this the basis for the idea that weight training gives you no appreciable gain in cycling (outside of sprinting)? I have more questions regarding the "generation of power", but this is a good place to start. Thanks! John |
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#299 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: dublin ireland
Posts: 421
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Quote:
When seated, using normal pedalling, you cannot use a force greater than your own bodyweight. |
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#300 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 694
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Quote:
Plus the additional downward force generated by the other leg. This "opposing" force serves to keep you in the saddle despite using enough force to normally lift your weight with the other leg. Incidentally, I find myself on very steep climbs getting as far back on the saddle as comfortably possible. It "seems" as if I'm then able to use my arms for leverage, and generate MUCH more power at the top of the stroke (almost pushing directly forward) It also seems to involve different muscle groups that for whatever reason feel fresher. I refrain from doing this as I'm trying to work on my cadence more. |
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