It's 60 minutes and I think you're mixed up; you can output a higher power for less time. You reduce your 20 minute power output by 5% to predict your (lower) FTP that you can sustain for 3x as long.
in reality it's probably not all that important compared to consistency over a sustained period of time.
Quote from: mrjonathanr on January 24, 2022, 06:25:52 pmMy recent training so far has been:1) long boulders ~15 moves/45s duration. x4 reps per set. 2 mins rest between reps, 5 mins rest between sets.2) short boulders ~6-8 moves: 2a) 6 sets of 3, 30s rest between reps and 5 mins rest between sets. 2b) 3 sets of 6, 1min rest between reps, 5 mins rest between setsSounds about right to me. I wouldn't do more than 2x ancap sessions a week; I can't recover enough to do more. Probably could when I was 20, but then I could do a lot of things when I was 20 that I can't now.Quote from: mrjonathanr on January 24, 2022, 06:25:52 pmNaively I would think the best way to stimulate the glycolysis system is stress it fully, allow sufficient recovery, rinse and repeat. However, most training methodologies don't leave sufficient recovery between reps. Or is that the point?Stressing the system as hard as possible isn't necessarily the best way of training it, otherwise (for example) we'd just do aeropow and not aerocap/arc! I think most exercises aim to go to (near) failure but not necessarily per-rep. If you went to failure each rep you'd need long rests, but not so if you aim to approach failure each set.Quote from: mrjonathanr on January 24, 2022, 06:25:52 pmAnother question. The cycling methods are based around Functional Power Threshold. This is a measure of average top output over 45-60 mins (albeit measured in a 20 minute burst). This has nothing to with the timings of most boulders or sport routes, so what is the climbing equivalent measure? [edit: what follows is totally OTT geekery and is just me musing for fun. If you just want to know what to do for ancap training I strongly advise ignoring it]The climbing equivalent of FTP would be our equivalent of critical power, which is Dave Giles' critical force. It's not exactly the same thing, but fundamentally, they're both attempts to measure the maximum amount of effort that can be sustained long term, and primarily depend on aerobic ability.Where I think there is a lot of scope to improve climbing training is that at the moment, most workouts seem based on a % of max strength (for the fingerboard) or "standard" durations for intervals (i.e your 45s ancap intervals).But an aerobic workout should have an intensity based on your critical force, not your max strength, and some % of critical force/FTP is not a sensible way to calculate the intensity/duration of an ancap workout. The approach some cycling coaches take is to try and construct a "power-duration" curve. The duration managed at a given power output should closely follow a standard curve, predicted by the critical force/power model. However, when you measure real people you find that there are durations/intensities where they underperform. The basic idea is to target these areas in training.In a climbing context measuring a power-duration curve would involve something like doing 7:3 repeaters to failure with a range of added weights. The duration you manage at each particular added weight is recorded and compared the expectation from a critical force model. Areas where you do badly are emphasised in training.This makes a lot of sense to me, but I haven't come up with a way of gathering the data that is easy enough to make it worthwhile. But imagine for a second you had someone who wanted to spend a whole week measuring time to failure when dead hanging, and they came up with the following results:Weight added | Duration Managed | Expected Duration 10 kg | 2:20 | 2:10 15 kg | 1:00 | 1:25 20 kg | 1:05 | 1:05 30 kg | 0:50 | 0:43 40 kg | 0:30 | 0:32This climber "underperforms" in efforts just over 1 minute, but does OK at 45s efforts. Arguably, they'd be better off doing their ancap on longer circuits that take 1:00-1:20 rather than the "standard" 15 move circuits.
My recent training so far has been:1) long boulders ~15 moves/45s duration. x4 reps per set. 2 mins rest between reps, 5 mins rest between sets.2) short boulders ~6-8 moves: 2a) 6 sets of 3, 30s rest between reps and 5 mins rest between sets. 2b) 3 sets of 6, 1min rest between reps, 5 mins rest between sets
Naively I would think the best way to stimulate the glycolysis system is stress it fully, allow sufficient recovery, rinse and repeat. However, most training methodologies don't leave sufficient recovery between reps. Or is that the point?
Another question. The cycling methods are based around Functional Power Threshold. This is a measure of average top output over 45-60 mins (albeit measured in a 20 minute burst). This has nothing to with the timings of most boulders or sport routes, so what is the climbing equivalent measure?
Funnily enough Stu it was a very vague version of this fingerboard based testing you described that got me training ancap in the first place this winter. In Siurana in October I kept falling off projects without any pump but just feeling like I didn't have enough beans to pull through a specific move.
Nice anecdote! I guess it's an example for Paul about how more advanced testing might be useful. Although, to make Paul's rebuttal for him:
Exactly. My point is that you don't need 4DP to predict whether I'm a sprinter or better at dancing on the pedals going uphill. Anyone care to take a guess (36yr old male; 5ft 6; 57kg)? By observation I think you/a coach could easily point to the weak link in someone's energy systems (via qualitative assessment).
I think for lots of people you don't need testing that much to know where your weaknesses lie.. but I do think for some it can be useful.
Quote from: MischaHY on January 25, 2022, 09:59:31 amFunnily enough Stu it was a very vague version of this fingerboard based testing you described that got me training ancap in the first place this winter. In Siurana in October I kept falling off projects without any pump but just feeling like I didn't have enough beans to pull through a specific move.Nice anecdote! I guess it's an example for Paul about how more advanced testing might be useful. Although, to make Paul's rebuttal for him:1) What you describe above is a pretty classic sign of an underpowered anaerobic system, also called "trad climber's syndrome".2) If you hadn't been training ancap at all, it was likely a-priori to be a weak spot.So, maybe you didn't need the testing after all
Quote from: Stu Littlefair on January 25, 2022, 10:23:18 amQuote from: MischaHY on January 25, 2022, 09:59:31 amFunnily enough Stu it was a very vague version of this fingerboard based testing you described that got me training ancap in the first place this winter. In Siurana in October I kept falling off projects without any pump but just feeling like I didn't have enough beans to pull through a specific move.Nice anecdote! I guess it's an example for Paul about how more advanced testing might be useful. Although, to make Paul's rebuttal for him:1) What you describe above is a pretty classic sign of an underpowered anaerobic system, also called "trad climber's syndrome".2) If you hadn't been training ancap at all, it was likely a-priori to be a weak spot.So, maybe you didn't need the testing after all Now I agree in theory but in practicality I was so much in doubt that I could be right about the issue that it was great to have a test confirm it. I'd spent too long misassociating strength with power and aeropow with ancap and only recently cleaned up these definitions - this actually caused a two year plateau whilst I trained the right things at the wrong intensity and got absolutely nowhere. This was no doubt influenced by many people in my social circle who also had the wrong understanding constantly telling me how I clearly just needed to improve aero endurance because I was evidently strong enough due to being decent on an edge. I also had a tendency to open crimp everything because this was my strongest grip type but obviously was pretty shit for doing powerful moves on steep terrain, something else I wish someone had told me a few years ago (thanks to Ned's book that I finally learnt what I was doing wrong there). My ability to pull on small crimps (10mm>) improved by a ridiculous degree in the space of maybe 4 weeks after I started consciously using a proper crimp grip on the board and whilst climbing. I had to ease into this because in the beginning it felt like my fingers would explode (the main reason I never used it in the first place) but after the adaptation phase there was an exponential progression and I went from barely being able to hang a full crimp with two hands to being able to bodyweight one arm on the BM2K middle rung for a few seconds. I was absolutely blown away by this and am still amazed nobody ever pointed it out to me in ten years of climbing.The point of all this being that I think checking in on standardized tests can have a really positive effect on learning just by pointing out obvious weaknesses in a way that can't easily be ignored or misinterpreted so for me it's been incredibly valuable. It's not that I lay any specific value to the methodology but rather that as Barrows pointed out, considering these aspects in a very simple format allowed me to be sure of what I needed to work on and not convince myself that I needed more technique/aero/pointless dieting or whatever other random shit the anxious mind cooks up. I've the kind of mind that has a lot of intrinsic psyche but also feel much more comfortable doing long-form sessions as these feel like 'hard work' so it's been a challenge to reel this in and honor the short/intense session volume. I'm really curious how next season on rock will feel to be honest! Really interesting thread as well
I agree with this ^^ also, you could get an inconclusive result and be even more confused than had you not bothered! I've dived into AnCap this year (mainly based on never really having done any focussed training on it). Might try Stu's test at some point and see how I fair. I take it that, given I don't have access to any data to compare against, you just do a best fit curve and see where the peaks and troughs are?Bit annoyed at the lack of response from Lattice tbh. 2 emails, no reply so far....
edit: deleted because whilst mathematical models of physiology are OK, the quote system always beats me
How long for the max hang Stu, 7 seconds too?
You're on. I guess I can maybe just kind of spread it through the day while working, given each test will only be a few minutes?
Good effort to those scientifically minded enough to get stuck in, but on the flip side I do find the increased 'sciencification' of it slightly off putting.
I'd spent too long misassociating strength with power and aeropow with ancap and only recently cleaned up these definitions - this actually caused a two year plateau whilst I trained the right things at the wrong intensity and got absolutely nowhere.
Quote from: Fultonius on January 25, 2022, 12:55:51 pmI agree with this ^^ also, you could get an inconclusive result and be even more confused than had you not bothered! I've dived into AnCap this year (mainly based on never really having done any focussed training on it). Might try Stu's test at some point and see how I fair. I take it that, given I don't have access to any data to compare against, you just do a best fit curve and see where the peaks and troughs are?Bit annoyed at the lack of response from Lattice tbh. 2 emails, no reply so far....If you want to do the tests, I'm happy to analyse the data and send you a brief summary. The easiest way to do this test is probably to devote a full day to it. Warm up well and then do the following:1) Find your maximum two-arm hang weight on the edge you use. Rest 10+ mins.2) Do 7:3 repeaters to failure at 50%, 60%, 70% and 80% of your max weight*. Rest 20+ mins between these efforts. 3) Send me the times from each hang and your max weight (incl bodyweight).*don't forget bodyweight! So if you weigh 70kg and you can add 20kg, your max weight is 90kg. A hang at 70% of 90kg is 63kg, so you'd have to remove 7kg for this set.From those four hangs I can estimate your critical force and see if any of the efforts above are under predicted by the CF model.Offer open to anyone who wants to waste an afternoon...
I like to think I'm fairly clued up about training in a reasonable amount of ways but these threads make my brain explode! Good effort to those scientifically minded enough to get stuck in, but on the flip side I do find the increased 'sciencification' of it slightly off putting. I think its partly due to my irritation with that aspect of it that I've been much more freestyle with my approach to training the last few years out of a desire not to overcomplicate things unnecessarily.
Functional Threshold Power (FTP) is — quite simply — a measure of fitness.FTP represents the power (measured in watts) that you could theoretically maintain for about an hour, and it's the single metric we use to scale each of your workouts in our shared quest to keep your fitness growing.With regards to what's taking place within your body and the muscles themselves, riding at your FTP pushes you right up to that limit where pushing any harder will drastically limit the duration of your ride.But as long as you stay just below that acidic tipping point where your muscles light up and uncomfortably tolerable minutes become barely tolerable seconds, your muscles are in balance with the workload - for about an hour, anyway.
Based on the video analysis I have done of uncut ascents, I simply do not believe that 7:3 s repeaters are very similar to climbing, but I would love to be wrong.