by JayneToyne » Mon Apr 26, 2004 1:43 pm
Daren,
HR monitors are a good way of keeping focussed and also a good way of getting the most out of your existing rides/training.
You dont really need to go for the all singing all dancing HR monitor, unless you are a techno lover.
The pros of using a HR monitor:
*You can see when you have over-trained fairly quickly by an unusual readin on the monitor
*You can see if you are recovered or maybe suffering from illness when otherwise you might be feeling alright.
*You can target your training more specifically using the recognised %max zones
*You can avoid riding at a pace that might feel good, but in reality isnt hard enough to do any benefit and isnt easy enough to aid recovery.( see zones above)
*you can use it keep you more disciplined in your general training/fitness regime
The cons:
*You can spend a lot of time watching the pulse and not enjoying the ride.
*You can get carried away with science ad technology and forget that you do the training, not the gizmo with the numbers.
* it can be a negative distraction in any competitive ride/race. it might scare you when you see how high your heartrate goes in a breakaway/ chase.
as long as you use it wisely, then anyone, competitive or non competitive can really benefit from using a HR monitor.
I use the most bog standard monitor available, it tells me what my HR is, and I can set an upper and lower limit beeper if i want to.
I never use the beeper, and I only have to glance down occasionally to keep a check on my rate if im working to specific zones.
Dont be blinded by science, think "what am I going to do with the data I download from my HR monitor?" if you dont have a coach or someone who will analyse your readouts and be able to incorporate that into your training programme then its pretty much useless. ok it might be intersting to see, but other than that its a very expensive way to satisfy a curiosity.
You really dont need an alarm to let you know when you are working outside of a zone, you should be perfectly able to notice that yourself(unles its dark and you cant actually see it)
Simplicity is the way to start out, think of it as a rev counter and nothing more.
If you want to work to training zones, you need to know your resting HR and Max HR. ideally obtained from a ramp test but can be very roughly worked out via a 220 minus age formula.
if anyone wants their zones setting , just drop me a line with your max and resting rates and I can email you back with the zones and a chart of what each zone does for your training.
Jayne
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