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Saturday, May 28, 2016

HD300 - Analytics

  • How much climbing is there on this course?
  • Where does the climbing take place?
  • Is the climbing bunched up in only a few miles or is it spaced out?
  • Descending: where, how much, when?
  • Should my training be heavily weighted on climbing?  Descending skills?  Long hours of steady riding?
  • What kind of lights should I have?
  • Cold weather, rain?
  • Sweating makes for wet clothes.  What kind and how many?
  • Hydration?
  • Nutrition?
  • Cramping?
  • Where should I expect to lose / gain time? 
  • What will the long stretch of climbing do to my average MPH?
These are a few of the questions that need answers so that proper training and accomplishment can take place. 
CLIMBING:
  • There are 16,800 feet of climbing over the entire 300 mile course.
  • 80% (13,700 feet) of the climbing occurs within the first 191 miles. 
  • Though there is a `shock' climb of 13% grade at mile 13 of the HD300 it is only 3/4 miles long. Thereafter the climbing is more moderate.  Until mile 156. 
  • At mile 156 the grades become more steep (4% to 9%) and continue on that way for 31 miles.  An increase in elevation by 4,500 feet (to a top elevation of 10,600 feet).
So the most challenging part of the climbing starts at the halfway point of the event. 
DESCENDING:
  • In the last 95 miles of the event end there are 10,250 feet of descending. 
  • More than half (5,300 feet) of the descent takes place in the short distance of 26.7 miles (immediately after reaching the highest elevation).
  • The last 95 miles will take place in the dark of night, on empty and desolate roads.
  • Ambient temperatures will be in the 40F range.  When descending at speeds of 20 - 40 mph the windchill will drop that another 15F - 25F degrees.
  • Within this 95 miles there are another 3,100 feet of climbing. 
 STRATEGY:
From `the neck up' it is easier to do twelve 25 mile stages than to do one 300 mile stage.  
 
 TACTIC:
Two bikes.  One for climbing and one for descending and the flats. 
CLIMBING BIKE: 
  • Bacchetta Ti Aero
  • front double rings: 50/34t
  • Rear cassette: 36/11t
  • Railgun carbon fiber hard shell seat (Kent Polk)
  • Tiller and Zipp/SRAM R2C levers on a mini-bullhorn handlebar
DESCENDING AND FLATS BIKE:
  • Bacchetta CA2:
  • Double front gears: 58/42
  • Same rear cassette, Railgun seat, tiller, levers and handlebar
TRAINING:
I live in the Arizona mountains so it is a matter of choosing the `best' set of training courses.  Comparing the mileage, cumulative climbing and average feet of climbing per mile I've got excellent ("no excuses") training terrain. 


  • Failing to plan is a plan for failure. 
  •  Every time we breathe in and breathe out we get another chance.
  •  Action defines us.
  •  Behavior precedes awareness. 

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