mschwett
Well-Known Member
- Region
- USA
This 21 mile figure eight with the golden gate bridge in the middle has been my sort of "default ride" since I got my Creo four months ago. It's a mix of a few city streets, currently-closed roads through parkland, lightly trafficked open space roads, and the long and very windy bridge itself. It features around 1,500 feet of climbing, with one relatively continuous climb of around 600 feet, maxing out at 10%, and the rest in smaller 5% chunks. The first few times I did the ride, I was not attuned to fully turning the motor off when I didn't need it, and was new to cycling in general. Now the route feels as familiar as my own street, and it's pretty amazing how consistent the rides are. My average speed is within a very narrow range, 14.5-15.5 mph. Total time varies by no more than 5 minutes, depending primarily on wind and the occasional slowing for cars or perhaps cyclists on the bridge.
I'm most satisfied with using less and less motor over time, now only using eco mode, and only for about 2/3 of the long climb, sometimes right at the start, and on a tough or very windy day for a minute or two when turning into very gusty headwinds uphill. The motor contribution to the effort has been below 5% for the last two rides, and generally trending towards maybe 6 or 7 percent. Interestingly, the total amount of work for the ride, rider plus battery, has trended down a little, but not too much - from 345 wH average for the first five rides to 311 wH average for the last five. I'd attribute that 10% drop to improved technique, I suppose, riding on the drops more and wasting less energy to braking. I'm VERY interested to see how that number changes on different tires. I'm riding gatorskin hardshells now (2,000 miles, no flats, knock wood!)
Anyone else have a "go-to" ride that they do repeatedly? I'm far from tired of this one yet, I figure I have at least another hundred loops of it in me
the route:
the data:
and the views are pretty nice too
I'm most satisfied with using less and less motor over time, now only using eco mode, and only for about 2/3 of the long climb, sometimes right at the start, and on a tough or very windy day for a minute or two when turning into very gusty headwinds uphill. The motor contribution to the effort has been below 5% for the last two rides, and generally trending towards maybe 6 or 7 percent. Interestingly, the total amount of work for the ride, rider plus battery, has trended down a little, but not too much - from 345 wH average for the first five rides to 311 wH average for the last five. I'd attribute that 10% drop to improved technique, I suppose, riding on the drops more and wasting less energy to braking. I'm VERY interested to see how that number changes on different tires. I'm riding gatorskin hardshells now (2,000 miles, no flats, knock wood!)
Anyone else have a "go-to" ride that they do repeatedly? I'm far from tired of this one yet, I figure I have at least another hundred loops of it in me
the route:
the data:
and the views are pretty nice too