My name is Kenneth Lundgren. I am a professional cycling coach for Elite Endurance Training Systems. I coach athletes of all levels, from Cat-1 roadies to triathletes to Beginner or Expert mountain bikers... And I have a bunch of these guys on PowerCranks. Why? Because I'm a good coach! The athletes all have different PowerCrank programs, but they all attain similar success...
I race for the Northeastern Hardware Cycling Team. We compete in New England and have won the Garden State Cup for six consecutive years running. I am essentially a time-trial specialist. I took 2nd in the State Time Trial Cup and attribute much of my success to steady PowerCranking. My goals this year are to win the State TT Championships and place at Nationals.
Thanks for reading.
www.EliteEndurance.com Coach@EliteEndurance.com
I
remember racing Bear Mountain Fall 2005. A breakaway of four went up
the road. On the final lap, one of the riders, Ryan Morris of
In the downhill sprint, Morris, off the front for most of the race, was STILL able to take the sprint for 2nd. Pretty. Damn. Impressive. It was apparent that when Morris flatted, the horsepower of that break flattened, too…
I raced with him a month later in
In
May 2006 I found myself in a 2-man break with him at the Hollenbeck
Road Race, Cornell’s home race. We hammered for 44 miles, and this kid
just did not seem to tire. He crushed me in the steep uphill finish,
putting 11 seconds into me in less than 200 feet. Afterwards, we got to
talking, and he told me of his training secret…
As
an engineering major at Cornell, Morris was thinking of inventing the
ultimate training tool: independent cranks. But then he realized they
already existed: POWERCRANKS. Morris was on them immediately, riding
them a ton, and in less than two years, he went from being a Cat-5 to
Cat-1 and one of the top time-trialists in
Purchasing
a set of PowerCranks, second only to a power meter, is where you should
put your money if looking to improve performance. Carbon frames,
aerodynamic wheels, lighter pedals, hugely expensive wind-tunnel
testing, the latest 10-speed groupset – these things should not be your
ticket to getting faster. PowerCranks offer a plethora of benefits:
they teach you how to pedal more efficiently, strengthen your core,
strengthen your legs, help you maximize your strength, and teach you
how to best fit on the bike…
PowerCranks
force you to pedal each leg independently. When you get on the bike,
both crank arms are hanging down. You clip in and must pedal each leg
individually, picking your leg up and pedaling in complete circles –
there is no fixed bottom bracket holding the cranks together in a 180°
position. You can pedal one leg at time, both legs at the same time.
The moment you stop pedaling, both legs fall to the down position. Most
guys who get on them either want to not ride them again, sell them, or
can do only 5-20 minutes at a time. You usually ride very slowly and
the cadence is very, very low – most likely you find the 11 and keep it
there! You are hitting new muscles you never hit before and simply do
not have the ability to keep picking your foot up…
But
if you stick with it, PowerCranks will help you create the perfect
pedal stroke. Let’s break down the pedaling action: your hamstrings are
not only used on the upstroke. As you’re pedaling down, you should
already be pulling back. There is a lot of hamstring in the downstroke.
If you can access this large muscle in your downstroke, you will
increase power.
As
you get to the bottom of the downstroke, Greg LeMond’s advice from the
1980s remains the best and most succinct: “Scrape the mud off the
bottom of your shoe.” Never will you feel like you’re scraping mud off
the bottom of your shoe as much as when you are PowerCranking…
The
upstroke is primarily a hip flexor and hamstring effort. One way to
improve your pedal stroke, without using PowerCranks or doing pedaling
efficiency drills, is to mountain bike as it forces you to pedal in
circles to gain traction and get over rocks, roots, steep inclines, and
other challenges in the trail. When you start mountain biking, you’ll
realize how important a perfect pedal stroke is as you struggle through
a rock garden or ride over a log… It’s not surprising that many fast
mountain bikers are also avid PowerCrankers – mountain bikers have
excellent pedaling action…
The
final part of the pedal stroke is the top, and you need to drop the
heel as you come over the top of the stroke, something PowerCranks
automatically make you do. I can tell you from absolute experience that
after first riding these things, muscles in your ankle, in your calf,
behind your knee – muscles that you never knew you had – will be sore
because you’ve never used them on the bike before.
Team Campmor’s Eddy Ceccolini,
Just
remaining upright on the PowerCrank bike forces you to use core muscles
in your abs and lower back that you don’t use when pedaling traditional
cranks. Westwood Velo’s
As
the name implies, PowerCranks also do just that: they improve your
power. Because it’s tiresome to keep picking your leg up, you end up
pushing a bigger gear than normal, putting more stress on your quad. I
should also mention another important fact about PowerCranks: they are
HEAVY. When I put them on my Ghisallo, I added close to three pounds to
my bike. So, when pedaling you can certainly feel the weight of these
suckers, making the workouts even harder!
After
PowerCrank training, on your regular bike you will notice that you can
push a bigger gear, either when climbing, riding at threshold, or just
cruising at tempo. But the Cranks FORCE you to strengthen your
hamstring and hip flexors, so if you’re now using three muscles more
effectively as opposed to one on the road bike, do you think you can
ride harder, longer? The muscular workload is divided more evenly.
Something I’ve discovered is PowerCranks can take your strength and maximize it – The Tale of Two Opposite Time Trialists. Westwood’s
I've
been riding the PowerCranks for almost a year now. I'm the opposite of
Gisler, spinning a much smaller gear in TTs, 105-110 rpms, and I’ve
still garnered improvements because of the Cranks. I thought the
PowerCranks would help lower my cadence, but they really didn’t – the
cadence has actually increased! On the Cranks, I'm usually at 90-95
rpms. But I notice when I'm time-trialing, I can stay at a higher
cadence without fatiguing because my pedal stroke is much improved. As
a result, I feel much, much more comfortable time-trialing now. The
quads, hip flexors, hammies, core – everything just feels solid. My
legs aren’t fatiguing like they used to, whereas before I lacked the
massive power to TT fast at 110 rpms… PowerCranks catered to my
personal riding style and helped my capacity for time-trialing.
Succinctly,
PowerCranks help strengthen your strength. If you are a sprinter doing
sprints on them, I can guarantee you will sprint faster on your road
bike (you truly learn to balance your body – you can’t even sprint on
PowerCranks without a powerful core). If you are a climber and
consistently did hill repeats on them, whether a spinner or big-gear
masher, when you get on your road bike you will climb as if shot out of
a cannon…
Once
you put the Cranks on a spare bike, over time you’ll tinker with the
position so you can ride them better. On my PowerCrank bike, I now have
my handlebars higher, my saddle more forward and a little lower. I’ve
found that with my bars higher, I can keep my hip angle open, allowing
me to keep picking my leg up. Additionally, if you slide the saddle
back, you’ll find it easier to ride the Cranks.
However,
I’m focusing on TTs, so I have the saddle more forward, making it
harder to pull up (further back, you can ride longer because you’re
incorporating more leg muscle and core, and further forward you’re more
aero but relying more on your quads and will fatigue faster – this is
why if you want to become a good time trialist, as with anything else,
you need to train the position).
I
also found it easier for me to pedal with the saddle slightly lower, as
I can pedal THROUGH the stroke more effectively. I see too many riders
with their saddles too high, hips almost teetering up there, feet
pointing down to reach for the bottom of that pedal stroke, and if they
had that same height with PowerCranks, they’d have difficulty. With the
saddle a smidge lower than usual, I can power down and through the
stroke with more control – when I made the adjustment, I felt
exponentially more competent on the Cranks. If you began applying these
concepts to your road bike fit, I guarantee you’d benefit similarly…
Roger
Aspholm of FinCraft Endurance Sport Coaching and one of the nation’s
strongest 35+ racers has been riding PowerCranks since 1999. He
understands that you need to balance the body and get both legs equally
strong, that you need to properly tune that V8 engine! He thinks
they’re pretty much the greatest training invention, teaching the
neurological system to pedal perfectly.
Aspholm
makes a good point in that it takes a long time to build strength on
these things. “There is no shortcut to stardom, so be very patient,”
Roger says. “Once you have eliminated all your weak spots in your legs,
you can pretty much train normal on these. I do sprints, hill
intervals, longer steadier intervals, and once in a while even fast
group rides on these. If you have a PowerTap, then you have something
to stare at when you are dealing with the pain. Pain is good!”
Now
is the time to ride them. In the winter, we should all be returning to
the gym, hitting up a progressive lifting program. As the leg strength
is developed, endurance and force work on the bike can then be done.
All the while, we should be working on our pedaling efficiency – so
this means hitting the PowerCranks regularly! In my program, the first
six weeks of Foundation training focuses on pedaling mechanics – this
is what we need to do as we embark on winter riding. As the training
progresses, you'll be able to do tempo and force work on them, and then
during the season you should ride them at least once a week. Last year
I rode them on my easy days, hoping to get acclimated to them. This
year, I'm going to hammer on them once during the week, actually make a
PowerCrank day – they're that important.
Doing
group rides on PowerCranks is beneficial because it gets you on the
Cranks for a few hours, usually without going too too hard. Don’t get
me wrong: PowerCranks HURT. During a group ride, you’re working twice
as hard as the guy next to you. But because you really can’t focus
primarily on the downstroke and are instead hitting your hamstrings and
hip flexors so much, it’s difficult to get out of the Tempo zone, or
even elevate the HR up for extended periods… In a way, PowerCranking
prevents you from going too hard and keeps you in the proper training
zone because it’s difficult to hammer 100%.
PowerCranks
are not magic, not some fast secret, not an easy recipe to the podium.
You need to put in the time and be willing to suffer. Aspholm makes a
good point in that success does not come overnight. Like with
everything, you need to take your time with them and gradually find
improvement. But this much is guaranteed: if you have the desire,
motivation, and the ability to push yourself, PowerCranks are a great
way to help you realize 100% of your potential.
Elite Endurance Training Systems