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I Love Bicycling

I Love Bicycling is a website that is geared towards cycling for beginners with road cycling tips, training articles, nutrition tips, weight loss, how to’s and bike repair articles.

Benefits of Indoor Trainer Workouts

January 7, 2020 by Dyani Herrera

One of the many joys of cycling is the youthful sense that you’re “playing” outdoors, as you ride and take yourself through the environment. However, at times life obligations or the environment can hinder your training plan forcing you to adapt your workouts. Bike trainers are a great way to fit in an effective workout, and there are several advantages of using a trainer that will enhance your skills as a cyclist.

Benefits of Trainer Workouts

Benefits of Indoor Trainer Workouts

Mental Endurance

Riding in place for over an hour or more can become incredibly monotonous; however, it obliges you to focus on the task at hand. In contrast to riding on the road, where you’re worrying about safety, taking in the scenery, or casually talking to your riding buddy throughout your workout. Spinning on a trainer compels you to think of your pedal stroke, breathing patterns, and pain. There are no distractions; hence you really need to rely on your sport psychology techniques to get you through your workouts. Additionally, you can listen to your breathing patterns and control them in order to reduce early fatigue. This can definitely come in handy during a race where extreme focus and endurance are required for an optimal performance.

Here a few ways to beat indoor trainer boredom with a few different games on the trainer.

Improved Bike Fitness

When riding on the road there are interruptions such as stop lights, making a U-turn, decelerating to avoid contact with the rear wheel of a fellow cyclist, or fighting a headwind just to name a few. Conversely, when riding on a trainer there are no gaps in your workout and you’re riding at a consistent effort throughout unless, you’re doing intervals.

If your workout contains intervals, then use a bike computer with a cadence monitor to alert you of your RPMs. By using this monitor you can do high cadence work intervals with low cadence rest intervals. Another benefit of a trainer is the ability to adjust the resistance felt while riding. After a few consecutive sessions on the trainer your legs will feel stronger when riding on the road, and you’ll notice an increase in speed.

Practicality

Probably the best aspect of using a trainer is how practical it is to use for one’s lifestyle. You can still fit in a great cycling workout despite snowy or rainy conditions. If environmental conditions are unsafe, then you can set up the trainer indoors at any time and cycle. Some people become creative with their workout space and place their trainers in the garage with no air conditioning and a big fan for added resistance to simulate road conditions. Additionally, if life commitments become more time consuming than usual you can still schedule a session in before dawn or late at night. It’s also an efficient tool to maintain the balance between family and training.

The Best Bike Trainers

November 25, 2016 by Emma Lujan

best-bike-trainers

With the winter months upon us, investing in a stationary bike trainer can provide you with the opportunity to improve your fitness and technique while avoiding the cold darker days.  The best bike trainers are a great investment since they allow you to have a very specific and dedicated ride since there are no downhills, no coasting and every pedal stroke will require effort.  It is a good idea to have a fan, some music or movie, water and electrolytes as well as a towel or two to prepare for the indoor season.  There are four main types of bike trainers:

  • Wind Bike Trainer
  • Bike Rollers
  • Magnetic Bike Trainer
  • Fluid Bike Trainer

The Best Bike Trainers

Best Wind Bike Trainers

Wind bike trainers are among the most affordable best bike trainers around.  Pedaling powers a fan that provides the resistance for the trainer.  The resistance increases as the rear wheel spins more quickly either from increasing the cadence or using a bigger gear.  Wind trainers are inexpensive and durable, however they are quite loud and the resistance is often limited and does not always mimic a road-like feel.

Cycleops Wind Trainer

The Cycleops Wind trainer is durable, easily adjustable and has a great warranty.  The wind resistance provides a frictionless ride.  With an affordable price point, the Cycleops is one of the best wind trainers around.

Price: $130

CycleOps Wind Trainer, Black

Bike Rollers

Rollers are a type of trainer that require the rider to have great balance, an engaged core and efficient pedal strokes.  They take some getting used to, as well as learning how to mount and dismount, but they provide a very realistic and quiet road-like feel. They also have the added benefit of being much more fun to ride than a fixed trainer.

Elite Arion Rollers.

The Elite Arion Rollers is one of the best trainers on the market today because it is built with light-weight but tough thermoplastic frame, a step-up for ease of mounting and dismounting, and is easy to fold for storage or transportation.

Price: $250

Best Magnetic Trainers

Mag trainers use a magnet flywheel to provide resistance.  These trainers are easily adjustable for resistance and are not as loud as wind trainers.  The resistance can be manually adjusted from a knob on the flywheel or a handlebar attachment.  However, it is possible to overpower magnetic trainers on the toughest setting as your fitness improves.  For an average cyclist looking to log some miles through the winter a mag trainer can get definitely get the job done.

Blackburn Tech Mag 6

The Tech Mag 6 trainer from Blackburn comes with 6 different resistance settings, a bar-mounted resistance control and a tubular steel from with adjustable height.  This trainer offers durability and is easy to adjust the workload.  The Blackburn Tech Mag 6 is one of the best magnetic trainers on the market.

Price: $180

Tacx Blue Motion

The Blue Motion magnetic trainer from Tacx is one of the best trainers around since it offers 10 positions of resistance, taps out at a whopping 950W, and the flywheel mimics a realistic pedal stroke and road-like feel.

Price: $270

Best Fluid Trainers

Fluid bike trainers have a flywheel mechanism that’s driven by the bike’s rear wheel, but it creates resistance through fluid spinning around in the flywheel.  As the temperature increases, the fluid becomes thicker, so when you pedal faster the trainer resistance becomes more of a challenge. Also, in conjunction with that, as the flywheel within the fluid spins faster and faster, the resistance increases on a logarithmic scale which means the harder you ride, the more resistance there is. With this. fluid trainers have the most realistic road feel, they are very quiet, and they have a wide variety of features like pairing to power and the internet.

Kinetic Rock and Roll Smart Trainer

The Rock and Roll trainer is the the top of the line trainer around.  With its wide base it offers stability for standing on the bike for a very realistic road feel.  It has an electronic control that allows you to do targeted workouts, ride simulations and it pairs with Zwift and Trainerroad.  This trainer is super quiet, accurate and reliable.  The Rock and Roll trainer also is compatible with thru-axle bikes.

Price: $850

Cascade Fluid Pro Trainer

The Cascade Fluid Pro is one of the best fluid trainers on the market because it has a thermally sealed fluid drive which is very unlikely to ever have leaks.  The trainer is easy to set up; it folds for ease of transportation and it is very quiet so you won’t need to have the volume on max while working out to tunes!

Price: $350

Riding a trainer through the winter months can be an efficient way to workout without spending heaps of time dressing in layers and charging lights.  Because of the ‘no rest’ periods trainers provide, a 1 hour trainer ride is equivalent to at least 90min out on the road.  Trainer riding can be super fun too especially if you have one of the best bike trainers since you won’t have to worry about it failing you in any way.  Get a good playlist of music, invite some cycling friends over and be prepared to sweat!

How To Pick Indoor Cycling Stands

September 17, 2015 by U.M.

How To Pick Indoor Cycling StandsThe best part of picking up biking either as a sport or as exercise is that you can bike outdoors and indoors. By buying a nice indoor cycling stand you can get in the training you need while avoiding extreme weather, tending to a child at home, watching TV, or simply enjoying the great indoors. No matter what your reasoning is there are a few things you’ll want to keep in mind when you buy an indoor cycling stand.

The Many Types

Indoor cycling stands are not all uniform. Some stands sacrifice increasing resistance for easy setup. Others are ideal for mountain bikes but not racing bikes. The most popular indoor stands are:

  • Wind trainer
  • Magnetic trainer
  • Rim trainer
  • Fluid trainer
  • Pivot trainer
  • Roller trainer
  • Virtual-reality trainer

The difference between these stands is the resistance mechanism on the stand. For example, a wind stand uses fan blades to produce resistance while a magnetic stand uses a roller-driven magnetic flywheel to generate resistance. It is not the type of resistance mechanism you should worry about so much as the kind of resistance each generates.

Resistance

If you’re only biking indoors because you have to, the cycling stand you’ll probably like best is one that offers differing resistance. For example, if you increase your cycling speed, the stand will increase the resistance it gives you. This is great for sports training and maintaining a semblance of what you’ll experience when you’re on your outside route. Stands that offer realistic resistance are:

  • Wind
  • Magnetic
  • Fluid
  • Virtual reality

Noise And Vibrations

Many people prefer a quieter stand in order to hear music, television, or other people. Also, a really noisy bike stand can be incredibly obnoxious. A stand that vibrates too much will feel unstable and probably make you nervous when you use it. This is a sign of poorly constructed stand. You want to be able go as fast as you can for as long as you can without worrying about breaking something. Good and quiet stands include magnetic, rim, and fluid stands.

Weight, Storage, Easy Setup

Most bike stands weigh anywhere from 15-35 lbs so moving your bike stand around shouldn’t be too difficult. Many bike stands usually come with the added feature of being foldable. This makes them easy to store in closets, corners, and garages. However, keep in mind that not all bike stand models are foldable.

Lastly, you’ll want an easy setup. Bike stands often have easy-to-use lock mounting gears, skewer clamps, or quick lock cam levers. However, calibrating the resistance mechanism is usually what determines an easy setup or a difficult setup. Some resistance mechanisms need fine tuning each time you use the stand and others just go without any help. The most difficult stands to set up are the virtual-reality and rim stands.

When you go to buy a bike stand keep in mind the type of resistance mechanism that would work best for you. This is the most critical part of the bike stand as it is what determines how realistic your indoor ride is, as well as how easy the stand is to set up and use.

The Rise Of Indoor Cycling

September 17, 2015 by U.M.

The Rise Of Indoor CyclingIndoor cycling, often referred to as spinning, is a worldwide exercise phenomenon. Today it is one of the most popular group classes in fitness clubs and gyms around the world, attracting millions of people each year. Indoor cycling is a favorite of many fitness gurus and outdoor cyclists who use it to stay in shape during the off-season, too.

The Very Beginning

Indoor cycling began where a lot of great things seem to begin: a garage. Johnny Goldberg, a South African immigrant living in California, was a fitness instructor, endurance cyclists, and a competitor in cross-country and ultra-marathon races. He recognized a need for training indoors and subsequently thought of a way in which to replicate road cycling in his garage. He used his new indoor training regimen to break a record when he biked across Arizona (544 miles) non-stop for over 29 hours.

A year after breaking this record he started the first indoor cycling class in Santa Monica. His classes were open to large groups and focused on heart rate training, motivation, and breathing exercises. His new class used stationary bikes with sophisticated ergonomics and geometry to closely resemble a racing bike. With the help of a fellow cyclist, John Baudhuin, they installed 150 of these stationary bikes in several different gyms and fitness centers.

The Rolling Stone

In 1993, Rolling Stone magazine reported that indoor cycling was the ‘hot’ new fitness regimen not only for cyclists in their off-season, but for the general public as well. This led to a whole new market of people who could use indoor cycling to get in shape and stay in shape.

1994: A Big Year

Mad Dogg Athletics, Inc. was found by Goldberg and Baudhuin in 1994 with the idea that the start-up company would further develop indoor cycling as a valid fitness regimen. This was when they also trademarked the word Spinning. Business boomed and stationary bikes began pouring out of manufacturers and into fitness centers everywhere.

By the following year, Mad Dogg developed a teacher’s certification program for people looking to teach Spin classes. That program is now the standard for indoor cycling certification and education around the world.

Modern Spinning

Today, there are five stationary bikes produced by Mad Dogg and their affiliate, the Spinning program, for use in gyms and fitness centers. Another six models are produced for in-home use from this provider. There are many other brands that offer these types of bicycles as well. Then there are lines of spinning gear, accessories, DVDs, and full classes and programs for people to choose from. Millions of people use indoor cycling to get in shape while avid amateur and professional cyclists use indoor cycling to maintain their fitness in the off-season or when the weather prohibits outdoor riding.

Indoor cycling was designed to help athletes in the sport of cycling keep training no matter what. Cyclists could build an indoor training regimen and use it to break records and meet goals just as Johnny Goldberg did in Arizona. However, the benefits of indoor cycling are so numerous and so enticing that indoor cycling spread to the general population as a fitness and exercise routine.

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