dragratchet wrote: » its worth giving a few races a go with an expectation of struggling for the first few. its very hard to say 260watts at a certain weight will see you through. depends on on the course and the field that pitches up on the day (enter the juniors). i've raced a3 events where ive been hanging on for dear life whilst absolutely burying myself and races where i could have watched a few youtubes on my phone as we went around. get stuck in and see how well/badly you do... then build from there.do some club league racing first of course to develop some bunch skills which are a lot more important starting out than wattages imo .
TGD wrote: » Ya, it's all about w/kg + strategy. I won a Cat 4 with about 230 W/FTP.
Beasty wrote: » I disagree fundamentally on the w/kg point. That certainly has relevance in hilly races but on relatively flat circuits, unless you're going to try and make a break (where you may well be putting out twice as much power as someone sitting in the middle of a bunch) it's more down to tactical nouse and good luck.
TCRDublin wrote: » ... my FTP is 370 and I'm 67kg.
TCRDublin wrote: » I think people are getting too hung up on FTP, it's just a number for setting your training zones. If you're starting out racing, just enjoy the experience of it, good bad or indifferent. You will have a lot to learn. I'm starting out on my first open road racing season in A4 this year as well. I have been following a structured training plan for months for the 2017 season and my FTP is 370 and I'm 67kg. But that doesn't mean I'm going to win anything. I have to learn the intricacies of racing such as handling / conserving energy / when to attack etc...
niceonetom wrote: » If that's correct and you're not out of A4 by Easter then you are doing something very very wrong. Lads do the Rás with less than that.
TCRDublin wrote: » season and my FTP is 370 and I'm 67kg.
harringtonp wrote: » As pointed out above for flat A4 races it has little relevance, your tactical nous and all out power over a short distance is what it is all about. I reviewed Strava files recently for the Gleann na Geailt climb in the Lacey Cup 2016 and the hill on the Charleville 2 day Stage 2B for 2015/2016 and one thing for sure is that for me at 78kg to have any chance of hanging on a minimum of 320-330 for 10-12 mins is needed. So this is 4.2 W/KG for 10-12 mins at A3 standard. It is an absolute minimum which assumes a lower angled power climb (you won't have a chance of hanging on with this level in the Shay Elliot for example), a light setup, a huge amount of wheel sucking and a kind bunch. In many cases on lower angled 10-12 minute climbs in A3 races this will not be enough.
dahat wrote: » My FTP is done via virtual calculating from a turbo with Traineroad.
TCRDublin wrote: » FTP is 370 and I'm 67kg.
niceonetom wrote: » If you really do have >5.5 w/kg there's absolutely no need for a brain. Just ride away.
iwillhtfu wrote: » I can't see it to be honest. Interesting article on it here.http://www.stickybottle.com/uncategorized/chris-froomes-data-compared-to-irish-pro-ciaran-powers/
fat bloke wrote: » That's amazing! Look at fat boy Froome! And Ciaran Power was no lightweight either. What's with all these lard ar$es?
Alfasudcrazy wrote: » I used a garmin single sided pedal power meter to get my 208 FTP. I will try my other bike which has the dual power pedals next time as I am sure the single pedal system has less accuracy.