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"Keep pedalling at a smooth consistent rate and look up the hill in front of you " Basically it All 'part & parcel' of it I'm not as good as I used to be, but can still get up them | |||
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"It’s all about power to weight ratio. There’s no short cuts or an easy way of doing it, obviously the cheapest way is to lose weight and get in plenty of hills, living in Devon I can’t avoid them. As Eddie Mercyx said, ‘don’t buy upgrades, ride upgrades!’" I think it could also be noted It actually never becomes easier one usually just gets quicker or can ride further or steeper the perceived effort always seems to stay the same or infact one learns to inflict or tolerate more pain | |||
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"Any tips for slogging up hills?" Head up keep looking up get into a peddling cadence rhythm and stick to it stay seated never get out the saddle | |||
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"Granny gear, look up the hill and don’t stop. The more you do hills the easier they get; there will come a point where you start a hill in an easy cog, then as you climb you find yourself going up the gears and loving it. Avoid standing; too far back to keep traction on the back wheel the front gets light and you lose control. Too far on the front you loos traction on the rear. Sit and suck it up" | |||
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"If you don’t do hills, you’re not going to get any better at them - simple. Steep ones depend a good poet to weight ratio. Long gradients and you need to find your rhythm- change gear accordingly. Try low level intervals using lampposts as a marker-increase your cadence for two, ease back for two and repeat. If you’re riding a dinner plate block you’re also on a loser. Gear ratios are too spread and cause far too much cadence variation when you need to change down. I’m a bit old school and ride a 12-23 with a compact (winter, 38 summer). " Agreed on ratio spread Then again, l was once daft enough (early 90s) to head out around Norwood Edge, Fewston, Kexgill (A59) & East Chevin with a lowest gear of 42 x 21... It hurt! Others are just long steady ascents Eg: Snake Pass (A57) out of Glossop HolmeMoss (harder from Derbyshire side Some are plain nasty; Trooper Lane (Halifax - top of Beacon Hill) 'Shibden Wall' (Lee Lane) The Strines (officially Mortimer Road, & 11 miles long) | |||
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"If you don’t do hills, you’re not going to get any better at them - simple. Steep ones depend a good poet to weight ratio. Long gradients and you need to find your rhythm- change gear accordingly. Try low level intervals using lampposts as a marker-increase your cadence for two, ease back for two and repeat. If you’re riding a dinner plate block you’re also on a loser. Gear ratios are too spread and cause far too much cadence variation when you need to change down. I’m a bit old school and ride a 12-23 with a compact (winter, 38 summer). Agreed on ratio spread Then again, l was once daft enough (early 90s) to head out around Norwood Edge, Fewston, Kexgill (A59) & East Chevin with a lowest gear of 42 x 21... It hurt! Others are just long steady ascents Eg: Snake Pass (A57) out of Glossop HolmeMoss (harder from Derbyshire side Some are plain nasty; Trooper Lane (Halifax - top of Beacon Hill) 'Shibden Wall' (Lee Lane) The Strines (officially Mortimer Road, & 11 miles long) " Trooper Lane 38x23 - the only hill I’ve had to walk up | |||
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"If you don’t do hills, you’re not going to get any better at them - simple. Steep ones depend a good poet to weight ratio. Long gradients and you need to find your rhythm- change gear accordingly. Try low level intervals using lampposts as a marker-increase your cadence for two, ease back for two and repeat. If you’re riding a dinner plate block you’re also on a loser. Gear ratios are too spread and cause far too much cadence variation when you need to change down. I’m a bit old school and ride a 12-23 with a compact (winter, 38 summer). Agreed on ratio spread Then again, l was once daft enough (early 90s) to head out around Norwood Edge, Fewston, Kexgill (A59) & East Chevin with a lowest gear of 42 x 21... It hurt! Others are just long steady ascents Eg: Snake Pass (A57) out of Glossop HolmeMoss (harder from Derbyshire side Some are plain nasty; Trooper Lane (Halifax - top of Beacon Hill) 'Shibden Wall' (Lee Lane) The Strines (officially Mortimer Road, & 11 miles long) Trooper Lane 38x23 - the only hill I’ve had to walk up" I once did a race (run) that went up there, & off Beacon Hill, along the 'Magna Via' (the Dark Lane hollow-way) I got about 3/4 of the way up TL, then had to walk, or collapse! | |||
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"As a bit of a lump hills always caused me great pain. As already said power weight ratio is a huge part, fitness obviously, familiarity with the particular climb helps, a well maintained bike last thing you want is jumping of gears or chain slipping at wrong time, don't get caught up with bravado. If others want to ride in macho gears that's upto them, ride the gears which best suit you. I was given some good advice when climbing. Sit back on the saddle , don't grip the bars too hard as it causes tension and fatigue, on the hardest part of the climb every third peddle stroke push harder with that leg. Not only does this distract you from the work ahead due to counting it alternates the legs. But only for the hard part, rest of time as said smooth cadence find a style that suits you. And Like I said being a lump had a plus side once over the top, descending is as much if not more of a skill than climbing. Where as climbing is about fitness and body weight ratio. Going down a good skilled descender can really make up for lost time (not all unfortunately) But the mind is the thing that really makes the difference not giving up and being clever." I love idea of the third peddle stroke technique | |||
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"Hills are 60% head and 40% bike, if you think its hard before you get there it will be!! when i was young i had 3 gears and cycled everywhere.. never even mentioned hills. Now i have 20 gears and puff and blow up hills.. ok i am 65 but much of the hill is in my head. " not if your a fat fuck like me. Then it's 99% gravity However being able to hit 60mph on a downhill because of said weight makes me smile. | |||
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"Hills are 60% head and 40% bike, if you think its hard before you get there it will be!! when i was young i had 3 gears and cycled everywhere.. never even mentioned hills. Now i have 20 gears and puff and blow up hills.. ok i am 65 but much of the hill is in my head. not if your a fat fuck like me. Then it's 99% gravity However being able to hit 60mph on a downhill because of said weight makes me smile." Also uses to make my pooper twitch on the corners EEEEK | |||
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"Hills are 60% head and 40% bike, if you think its hard before you get there it will be!! when i was young i had 3 gears and cycled everywhere.. never even mentioned hills. Now i have 20 gears and puff and blow up hills.. ok i am 65 but much of the hill is in my head. not if your a fat fuck like me. Then it's 99% gravity However being able to hit 60mph on a downhill because of said weight makes me smile." When l was younger, l'd head down hills as quick as possible, l guess partly adrenaline? There's a descent to the north of Leeds that 60MPH could be seen (measured by Avocet, due to set-up, probably more accurate than GPS) If anyone from West (or North) Yorkshire is reading, East Chevin is the hill l refer to | |||
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