Quote from: Muenchener on February 19, 2021, 11:05:20 amI read the papers, a couple of times, and did some self-testing. Still not entirely clear what the results tell me. I know my 7-second max hang weight, and I now also know that I can do 7/3 repeaters at 42% of that for just under six minutes. Now what?Now do two more sets of 7:3 repeaters to failure at (say) 55% and 65%. You need to be fully recovered between these. Now plot a graph of load*time against time. If you fit a straight line to it, the slope will be your measure of W’ and the intercept will be your critical force.
I read the papers, a couple of times, and did some self-testing. Still not entirely clear what the results tell me. I know my 7-second max hang weight, and I now also know that I can do 7/3 repeaters at 42% of that for just under six minutes. Now what?
Just a bump on this in case anyone is interested -.£45 posted now.
But then I also get pumped before the crux sometimes
In a general sense a cf of 40% is pretty normal. I don't know anything about their models, so I suspect on the data they've collected 40% is at the lower end so they're saying you're at the lower end. Hard to say how meaningful this analysis is without knowing some more about their dataset and their analysis. Take it with a pinch of salt.The other thing to bear in mind is how these results relate to your goals. If your goals are 50m overhanging pump fests then working to improve your cf is a good idea. Less so if you want to tick Zeke the freak.
If you follow the link to Dave Giles’ paper I posted above, and look at figure 4C then a CF of 40% puts you on the solid line, which is just slightly below average in the data from that paper. Without crunching the numbers I’d say that 42-44% would be about “standard”.
Cheers Remus. Is the model not just an algorithm which fits the the data points to a curved line? Or are you referring to the model as in the data set of scores which could be open to selection bias?
Quote from: Stu Littlefair on December 02, 2021, 10:22:41 pmIf you follow the link to Dave Giles’ paper I posted above, and look at figure 4C then a CF of 40% puts you on the solid line, which is just slightly below average in the data from that paper. Without crunching the numbers I’d say that 42-44% would be about “standard”. Is it not slightly above average rather than below? Looks to me like the bulk of the data is above the line, which if I've read it right means that 40% MVC is higher than CF for the bulk... Am I mistaken?
Yeah you should be able to get some useful numbers out. Worth noting that they're not the same thing though, peak load is instantaneous and often quite a bit higher than e.g. a 7s max hang, where you need to maintain a certain level of force output for a sustained period of time.