Thursday, August 30, 2007

Power Geeks - you're world is getting more complicated!

There are a lot of new cycling technology gadgets on the horizon, many of which are likely to be introduced to the public at Interbike this Fall. First up is a new power meter called the Quarq. The Quarq measures power at the crank using a spider-mounted sensor. It has a fancy bar-mounted computer called the Cranium with a large LCD display. The crank-mounted power sensor communicates wirelessly with the Cranium using a new wireless communication protocol called Ant+Sport. Early reports are that the Quarq will be quite robust and will be competitively priced.

Next up are two new Garmin GPS devices, the Edge 705 and 605. Both new devices employ the Ant+Sport wireless communication protocol and will be compatible with the Quarq. There is no definitive word yet on whether they will communicate with the existing PowerTap Wireless 2.4, but rumors suggest that they will be compatible. Additional intriguing features include wireless downloading to your PC, wireless communication between devices (sharing waypoints and trackpoints between GPS devices), and a color display.

Wirelessly combining a GPS device with a power measuring device opens up a whole new realm of possibilities, including measuring the power requirements for climbs, wireless telemetry while riding, wireless weather data, etc. Now all we need is the ability to hack into our competitors' units to figure out when to attack . . . .
I'm immensely proud of the SquadraCoppi girls who raced Ironman Louisville this weekend. In short, they CRUSHED. Jean Colsant, aka IronBean, raced her first Iron distance event - 2.4 mile swim, 112 mile bike, and a marathon - for a total of 140.6 self-propelled miles in one day. She trained diligently all year with the help of her experienced coach, David Glover of Enduranceworks, putting in big miles on the bike and getting in high-quality long runs on the weekends. She executed perfectly on race day, setting her watch to eat and drink every 30 minutes on the bike and pacing herself appropriately throughout the race. Amazingly, given the 89 degree heat, she didn't cramp, bonk, or dehydrate. She finished in 12 hours 53 minutes, a fantastic time for a first Iron-distance event. She was smiling every time I saw her on the course.

Adrianne Kroepsch had a personal best race too. She won her age group by a large margin and finished 9th OVERALL among the women with a time of 10:47. She averaged 20mph on the bike and 8:22 miles for the run. Get this girl a PRO contract, folks.

Jean's coach, David, drove out with us and did the race too. It was his 3rd Iron distance event this season, and was only 2 weeks after his win at Vineman. He had a solid race, but I think he had a better time hanging with Jean's entourage.

I was on my bike the entire day (putting in 80 miles) watching the race. I caught Jean at the start, the swim-to-bike transition (T1), twice on the bike course, at T2, and at mile 12 on the run. I then hustled back to pick her bike and (smelly!) clothes from transition, shower, and change into clean clothes for the finish. The finish was amazing - a long chute with people 3-deep on both sides. It was set up in the 4th Street Corridor in the heart of downtown Louisville, surrounded by retail and food outlets. It was also a convenient 2 blocks from our hotel, the Galt House.

Jean had a huge entourage of supporters at the race, all dressed in home-made red t-shirts supporting the IronBean. Her entourage included her mom, step-dad, two sisters and their children (5 kids total!), her aunt and cousin, and a friend from D.C. And me - the Tri-Sherpa. The weekend was a huge blast.