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#1 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 6
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I'm a late convert to maintaining fitness over the winter using the turbo trainer. It can be very effective, I've realised, with a heartrate monitor.
But it is always pretty tedious, even with the radio playing and your heartrate to monitor. I have a couple of my own routines for a 30-40 minute workout, but if anyone out there has some of their own they're willing to share, I'd love to hear about them. My own current favourite is the criss-cross lactate threshold thing - if anyone's interested, let me know. Anything to liven up the prospect of another session of going nowhere fast! Thanks, Matt |
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#2 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Upstate NY
Posts: 53
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Quote:
I use the Spinervals and CTS videos. Spinervals publishes workouts of the week that is available at: http://www.spinervals.com/spinlive.asp You may give those a try if you have the gumption to do them on your own. |
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#3 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 6
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Dear djg21
Thanks for that url and tips. Looks useful. Although I slightly doubt I'll be getting off the bike to perform vertical jumps as recommended this week! My own latest discovery is a 'criss-cross LT' workout. I won't bore you with details unless you specifically want them. Best, Matt |
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#4 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: South Africa
Posts: 119
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Would love to hear about your criss cross lt work out.
I normaly do a 20 - 25 minute ride in the morning maintaning 60 - 70 % HR. This is normaly at about 80cadence In the evening I do sprint training. - 5 minute warm up - 15 second flat out sprint - 4m45s easy ride (normaly 70-80 RPM) - 15 second flat our sprint and so on until you dont have time left, then do a 5 minute cool down. I normaly only do between 30 and 45 minutes though.
__________________
Passion is everything. without passion cycling is just exercise --------------------------- Road Bike : Cannondale MTB Bike : Giant Boulder se |
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#5 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 6
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Man, you are keen: two sessions a day!
I should work on my sprints, I know - I'll give that one a try. As for the criss-cross thing, it works like this: I'm assuming for this purpose that lactate threshold is around 88-95% of your MHR. The purists will jump on me for saying that: some will say you should determine it by doing a 30-min TT test; others that you can't base it on HR at all, but on a power measurement. Only owning an ancient HRM, I'm stuck with the low-tech approach, and I find 88-95% of MHR functions just fine for this workout. So, set your HRM with lower limit at approx 88% and upper limit at 95%, then (if you feel you have a reliable LT number, then lower is 8-10 below, upper 5-7 above)... 5-10 mins warm-up, winding it up until you're in the zone (at my age, that's 155bpm). Then accelerate gradually over approx 2 mins until the alarm goes off at the upper limit (170bpm for me). Then wind down gradually over 2 mins until you're back down to the lower limit. Then back up again. Repeat until you're fed up/knackered. 30 mins is plenty. The good thing about it is, I guess, that it replicates somewhat the accelerations and plateaus of actual racing, while at the same time making you work pretty hard at near-to-maximal aerobic level. Let me know how it works for you. Happy sweating! |
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#6 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: South Africa
Posts: 119
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Quote:
Thanks for that.
__________________
Passion is everything. without passion cycling is just exercise --------------------------- Road Bike : Cannondale MTB Bike : Giant Boulder se |
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