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Photo: Team EVELO
Bottom line: A lighter bike may save you a few seconds per climb. But if you really want to get faster, there are better ways to spend your energy and money, like shedding bodyweight, upgrading your wheels, and making your bike more aerodynamic.
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A much more efficient—and economical—way to lighten your load is to shed body weight, says Gourley, not bike weight. (That’s assuming you have at least a few extra pounds to lose—which, let’s be honest, most of us do.) Not only will it reduce your overall weight by a larger percentage, but it will also increase your VO2 max, which can automatically give you more power. Building leg strength is important, too. “Everyone wants sexy, super light bikes, but good legs are sexy too,” he says. “I see a lot of people with expensive bikes but they have cheap legs. It’s like driving a Corvette with a two-cylinder engine.” If you really want to upgrade your current ride without spending a lot of cash, there is one thing you should focus on: aerodynamics. “There’s a saying in the cycling community that aero trumps weight, and I agree completely with that,” says Martin. And while shaving your legs or buying an aerodynamic frame, helmet, or wheels can make you slightly faster, you’ll get the biggest bang for your buck by adding aero bars if you’re racing on a course that allows them, and adjusting your position on the bike. “If you can reduce your frontal area by 10 percent, you’ll also reduce drag by that much,” he says. “The position of your elbow pads, where you put your arms on the bars, the way you hold your head—these are the things that make the biggest difference and are usually pretty easy fixes.” This holds true no matter what speed you ride, he adds. “There’s this pervasive notion that aerodynamics doesn’t matter if you ride below a certain speed, like 18 or 20 miles an hour. But the irony is that it can matter even more to slower riders, because they’re out on the course that much longer.” Reducing drag by 10 percent on a 90-minute 40K ride can save nine minutes, he explains; for someone who does it in 50 minutes, it only saves five. Bottom line: A lighter bike may save you a few seconds per climb. But if you really want to get faster, there are better ways to spend your energy and money, like shedding bodyweight, upgrading your wheels, and making your bike more aerodynamic.
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