iPhone App you and your student’s will love

iPhone App you and your student’s will love

When I'm asked to review a product or service that includes new technology, I'm always a bit hesitant. You see I like simple and I tend to see many new products trying to solve a problem that really doesn't need to be solved or will add another (needless) layer of complexity/frustration/distraction to the lives of Instructors and/or their students.

Power indication in our classes is a perfect example. Seeing our watts is a huge step for many of us and equally so for our students. We see the value of all this information (metrics) about the amount of work we're doing in class. Many of us are excited to use that data as the basis for improving our fitness.

But what do we do with all this new information?

Collecting your data is a good place to begin. Both the FreeMotion and Schwinn Power Meter consoles offer the option to plug in a USB flash drive. After your training session you can download the ride to your computer to see what you've done. Which is interesting, about two times. Then you realize that looking at a snapshot of a single day isn't really telling you anything of value. If you're an Excel expert you can build a fancy spreadsheet to show graphs where you can see trends. Or you can subscribe to an online service like Training Peaks ($20 a month if you want the graphing features), upload your results and track your fitness. I see online services as an excellent choice for a committed athlete, but a bit over-the-top for the Club Athletes that make up the majority of our classes.

When Cameron Chinatti from Stages Indoor Cycling explained their new iPhone App, which is designed for use with the FreeMotion console, I saw it as a potentially useful tool that could benefit both you and your students.

So I agreed to give it a try to see if it was in fact useful and not needlessly complex or distracting.

Click here to see my review of the FreeMotion S11.9 and S11.0 Indoor Cycles.

Or order a Freemotion S11.0 Indoor Cycle – Includes the Power Sensor Console – from amazon.com with free shipping
Set up.
The console uses Ant+ to communicate with other devices. iPhones don't “hear” Ant+ signals, so Cameron sent me a Wahoo Key – a little device that plugs into the bottom of your iPhone. I then purchased the $0.99 Stages App from the iTunes store and installed it.

freemotion s11.0 power meter iPhone app

Using the Stages App.

I have a “Is it intuitive and easy to use?” test, which is simply; “do you turn it on and it works… Yes or No?

The App passed – and as long as I followed the proper procedure, every time I turned it on it worked.

The console is designed to “Pair” fancy word for connecting to both a Heart Rate strap and/or your iPhone during “Warm Up” mode. Once you advance to Stage 1 Pairing is no longer available. With the Stages App turned on, pedaling the bike and the console in Warm Up you will see:

Pressing the Stage button brings you to the main screen.

My second test is; “what value does this product provide, beyond some fancy graphics?”

Something we all need to know.

The Stages App will calculate your FTP (Functional Threshold Power) and your Heart Rate at FTP over a series of rides. Understanding your FTP is as important as knowing your Threshold Heart Rate. With both these metabolic markers you can create specific training zones. Once your student's know their Power Zones your class will be a whole lot easier to teach for you and more understandable (and beneficial) for them 🙂

Here's the setup screen where you can select to App to calculate your FTP or you can manually add it if known.

FreeMotion iPhone App Calculates your Functional Threshold Power FTP and Heart Rate

Auto-Calculate FTP is HUGE

I talked to Cameron about the auto-calculate feature because after three rides it was showing my FTP as 186 Watts vs. ~240 watts which I'm normally seeing during a long hard effort. Her response was; “how hard did you ride during those classes?” I admitted that I hadn't worked as hard as I could have. Cameron explained that App is looking for your best 20 minute average wattage and if I don't provide a hard/long effort the App doesn't have the necessary data to work from. It didn't have any trouble calculating my FTHR 🙂

 

There's much more to this App and I am planning a Podcast with Cameron to explore all it's functionality in more detail. For more now please check out this Quick Start video and if you are teaching or training on a FreeMotion S11 series Indoor Cycle I highly recommend that you start using this App – ASAP.
Order your Freemotion S11.0 Indoor Cycle – with Power Sensor Console

Originally posted 2012-05-13 11:33:38.

iPhone App you and your student’s will love

A good ride!

That's me in the hat - with the MI team from ICG.

That's me in the hat – with the MI team from ICG.

I taught my last class today. My last ride so-to-speak. It all started seven years ago. I had been Spinning® for years. That day our regular instructor asked me to lead her class. She was just too sick.

To me – a pilot – it was like being asked to safely land an airliner because the pilots were incapacitated. Truth be told, I was far more prepared to land a 747 than lead the class. But I did it, and that is where my ride as indoor cycle instructor began.

Penning this post for ICI/PRO is – for the most part – where it ends. A memoire of sorts that highlights milestones of my journey from certified but lost, to Master Instructor, what I learned along the way about our craft and our industry.

Realizing the joy of being in the front of the studio, I took the first of countless certifications the next month. A one day, eight hour class. Leaving that afternoon I realized what I didn’t know.

I knew that to be the instructor I wanted to be, would require more than eight hours. So I did what all red blooded Americans do, a Google search on teaching indoor cycling.

Lucky for me John understands search engine optimization. ICI/PRO was top of the list and my life as an instructor changed.

Back then John was publishing ‘podcasts’ and posts talking about something he called Indoor Cycling 2.0. What?? I was in my car a lot in those days with my iPod plugged into the radio. I listened to it all trying to figure the best way to integrate such wisdom into my teaching.

There were guest speakers who discussed everything from music to very cycle specific training.

There were posts from this guy, Gene Nacey, who had started a company called Cycling Fusion. Gene wrote a book back then about training with power. The forward, written by Sally Edwards. Who were these people and why are they always talking about heart rate, power and cadence?

ICI/PRO offered class profiles with music suggestions. I found these very helpful but they had names like muscular strength or climbing power or aerobic volume training. It was all very overwhelming.

I realized what made it so overwhelming was that I had not really been educated. That my eight hour class hardly scratched the surface of what ‘training’ on an indoor cycle was really about.

My experience taking classes was just the opposite. My favorite instructor never did any of this stuff. I had reached a defining moment. Indoor cycling version 1.0 or 2.0.

I chose 2.0 because it had the education I yearned for and the structure that seemed missing from the classes I took. I had always been a fan of heart rate. Moreover, the new bikes at the JCC – where I was trying to land a sub job – measured heart rate and had power meters. I knew that seemed like the perfect combination but – at the time – had no idea why.

I got the sub job and a fair amount of opportunity to teach in those early years. I began my quest to get better through education. My sub classes (all I had at the time) were – unbeknownst to them – my guinea pigs.

Having read Gene’s Power Training Book there were some questions. I had found a way to land a ‘regular’ class in prime time by offering to do a power training course. I had questions, so I called him.

Gene is the quintessential professional. He always gave freely of his time to answer my questions. But he warned me, “Chuck where you are going you will discover a culture, the culture of indoor cycling. Good luck.” But more on that later.

Later that year he was doing the official launch of his new company, Cycling Fusion by hosting a summit of some of the most nationally regarded indoor cycle instructors. I’m not sure where I found the nerve, but I offered to kick off the summit suggesting that I was representative of the new 2.0 instructor. To my surprise Gene said yes.

The rest is history. My relatively short, but incredibly intense career really began at that summit, west of Denver high in the Rocky Mountains at Keystone Ski Resort. Why? I met Sally Edwards. Talk about unbridled energy. Sally – the only person ever inducted into both triathlon halls of fame – epitomizes it.

Suffice it to say that when I ran into Sally at the Denver airport after the summit I knew I was home. John led me into the room, Gene opened the window and Sally was the sunshine that poured through. There are not enough words to describe the learning one experiences working with Sally Edwards.

But if Sally was the sun shining on my personal learning crusade, Jim Karanas was the fresh air flowing through the open window.

Jim was indoor cycling 2, 3, 4 and 5.0 way before anyone ever heard of a ‘podcast’. Sadly, Jim left us a while ago, but his legacy lives on in all of those he touched. From Jim I learned to put the icing on the cake. That at the end of the day, it was not about me or just about heart rate or power, cadence or cycle specific training. It was about bringing to class the ability to touch each rider such that they were sure I was teaching class just for them.

When I made the choice to give up leading classes I did it with the knowledge that I had met my own challenge – to understand the whole of indoor cycling yes, but to touch the people who trusted me in a positive manner. How did I know? Simple really, rider feedback. Additionally, I had grown past the place where I was committed to only one way. I was comfortable teaching outside the keep-it-real philosophy that had governed my every thought for so long. I knew that Indoor cycling 2.0 was only a pass to explore and learn, not a rigid protocol to vigorously defend. That my job was not to suppose I knew what my riders needed, or how they got it, but to provide for them what THEY thought they needed that day. I can do that. I have done that. I am content. I have moved on but I have not forgotten.

In the coming weeks I will give John some additional posts written but never submitted. Posts that take a close, perhaps inside look at the realities of our industry. Fruit for thought or maybe, fuel for a fire.

It has been my privilege to have met and worked with so many great and talented individuals.

I wish you all well!

Originally posted 2015-02-08 14:30:39.

ICI PRO Podcast 368 – Does Intensity Trump Duration?

ICI PRO Podcast 368 – Does Intensity Trump Duration?

one minute indoor cycling class

Do Indoor Cycling Classes really need to be 45-60 minutes – to provide the health and fitness benefits expected by our participants?

Asked another way: If your studio offered classes that were shorter (say 30 minutes), while still just as effective as 3/4 or a full hour, could an “express class” attract people who feel time strapped?

Of course anytime you use the words “just as effective” smart Instructors are going to ask; “show me the research”!

Martin Gibala, Ph.D. is my guest, for this episode of the Podcast. Dr. Gibala has done the research (and I'm quoting from the back cover of his new book – The One Minute Workout) “As the world's foremost expert in high-intensity interval training, Martin Gibala has pioneered the study of new and remarkably time-efficient type of workout, making available the benefits of exercise in a fraction of the time.

Listen to our conversation in the Podcast below to learn more about the science of HIIT and how you could use this information to improve your classes and attract more participants.

Here's a short video featuring Martin Gibala, Ph. D.

Join Stages Cycling at Club Industry 2015 Next Thursday, October 8th, for FREE Training from the Company that KNOWS POWER!

Join Stages Cycling at Club Industry 2015 Next Thursday, October 8th, for FREE Training from the Company that KNOWS POWER!

Screen Shot 2015-10-01 at 9.12.07 PM

 

You don't find opportunities to ride and learn from the experts everyday, let alone for FREE!

Join Stages Indoor Cycling, Director of Education, Cameron Chinatti and Master Educator, Dennis Mellon and learn…

  • Best Power Practices
  • Video Rides to remember
  • Stages Special Edition of Performance IQ
  • Power zone training
  • and more!
Here are the descriptions and form links to register for each:
8:30-10:00 – Oh no! Not the Power Police – Led by Cameron Chinatti:  It’s official: consoles and power measurement for indoor cycling are here to stay. But with every new piece of equipment comes ‘creative’ misuses and abuses.  Avoid getting caught by never committing a crime in the first place! You’ll learn the most common crimes against consoles, then get ready to ride as we explore our top-ten best power practices. These Simple Setsâ„¢ will give you hours of new ride content and provide priceless aha! moments for your participants.  Join Stages® Indoor Cycling to see how easy it is to use today’s data to achieve tomorrow’s goals.
Register for the 8:30am session, here: http://goo.gl/forms/FBrFLLtvkZ
11:00-12:00 -Head Up to Get Down!  – Led by Cameron + Dennis    Do you want to know that you’re doing exactly the right amount of effort?  Join Stages® Indoor Cycling for a ride with our Special Edition version of Performance IQ Heads Up Display, better known as Stages IQ. A quick 3-minute assessment is all you need to determine your Power Rx – the most important piece of ride data you’ll ever need! For the first time ever your entire class is doing exactly what they need to get better and see the results they’ve always wanted.
Register for the 11:00am session, here: http://goo.gl/forms/9UKtDmYUTs
1:30-2:30 -Show Me – Led by Dennis Mellon:  If a picture is worth a thousand words, then a video is worth a million!  Since the inception of indoor cycling, instructors have been talking and talking in an attempt to set the scene for their riders' indoor journey.  Let’s stop talking and start showing! What is the speed of a sprint finish or the increased pulse of an epic ski run? Let’s dance to the beat of your favorite artist and experience the POWER of your favorite band playing a live concert.  Through the use of video and the new Stages SC3 Eco Screen there is no course that cannot be ridden and no metric that cannot be evaluated to take your riders on the most epic fitness journey ever!
Register for the 1:30pm session, herehttp://goo.gl/forms/ggYUrTXEor
3:30-5:00 – Oh No! Not the Power Police + SIQ – Led By Cameron Chinatti:   It’s official: consoles and power measurement for indoor cycling are here to stay. But with every new piece of equipment comes ‘creative’ misuses and abuses.  Avoid getting caught by never committing a crime in the first place! You’ll learn the most common crimes against consoles, then get ready to ride as we explore our top-ten best power practices. These Simple Setsâ„¢ will give you hours of new ride content and provide priceless aha! moments for your participants.  Join Stages® Indoor Cycling to see how easy it is to use today’s data to achieve tomorrow’s goals.
Register for the 3:30pm session, here: http://goo.gl/forms/4Mwxd6UTXB
It’s a Power of 3 Free-For-All Profile

It’s a Power of 3 Free-For-All Profile

FreeForAll_at_Kenneth_Cole_2_400x400

 

It's amazing how time flies when you're having fun AND training with a purpose.  We've just completed the third week of our “The Power of 3 – Keep it Simple and Progress – Profile” for August.  Now it's time to do something crazy!  Let's pick a 60 minute mixes from one of the previous weeks, doesn't matter which one.  Let's warmup for 5 minutes, then ride at maximum sustainable intensity, heart rate or threshold wattage for 9 minutes.  At the end of the 9 minutes check average heart rate or wattage and hold this number for the rest of class.  Sound easy? Well it's not!

If you haven't noticed I like the number “3”.  As you ride through the rest of class try to put together sets that are 3 minutes long.  For example, increase RPM every minute for 3 minutes, ride at a slow RPM, 60-65 for 3 minutes, stand for 3 minutes.  Anything works, but make sure average HR or wattage does not drop.  It's all fun and games until fatigue starts to set in around 30 minutes then things get VERY challenging.

Now there is a little science to go along with this madness.  It is assumed that a rider can ride at Threshold for an hour, so theoretically if a rider know his/her threshold he/she can do this entire ride at Functional Threshold Power.  The science says it can be done so challenge your riders to average their FTP for then entire ride.

Here's an example of me teaching this type of class:

Recording of me teaching this profile with Power on the Stages SC3 Indoor Cycling Bike

Here's some music you could use:

60 minute music mixed track

 

60 minute music mixed track

 

60 minute music mixed track

 

60 minute music mixed track

 

To download any of the above media on a Mac:

  1. Right Click on the blue underlined link
  2. Select “Download Linked File As”
  3. Select a download location
  4. Once file is completely downloaded, find it in the location you selected
  5. Drag the file into your iTunes or Spotify library OR
  6. Right Click on the file and Select “Open With”
  7. From the drop down menu select “iTunes” or “Spotify”
  8. File should begin playing and is now part of your iTunes or Spotify library

To download any of the above media on a PC:

  1. Right Click on the blue underlined link
  2. Select “Save Link As”
  3. Select a download location
  4. Once file is completely downloaded, find it in the location you selected
  5. Drag the file into your iTunes or Spotify library OR
  6. Right Click on the file and Select “Open With”
  7. From the drop down menu select “iTunes” or “Spotify”
  8. File should begin playing and is now part of your iTunes or Spotify library

Click here to watch a video on how to download media files from ICI/Pro.

The Power of 3 – Keep it Simple, Let the Body Adapt and Progress (Week 2 Progression)

The Power of 3 – Keep it Simple, Let the Body Adapt and Progress (Week 2 Progression)

Career-Progression

Last week I wrote about how my simplest sets and profiles are most often my most popular.  I have also found that if I simply progress profiles from week to week, usually in 3 week blocks, my classes enjoy the familiarity of the workout and see progressive improvement.

To add progression to a block of workouts all you need to do is add time to each interval or reduce recovery or increase intensity to each interval set.  This allows the body to adapt from workout to workout.  Check out this article from Training Peaks about progression, How to Build Workouts.

I inevitably get the response from instructors that their riders like every class to be different or they'll get bored.  My response is, “Even class IS different!”  I use different playlists and videos from week to week, I may keep similar yet progressive profiles but I'll change around how each set is ridden, for example,  seated vs standing or fast rpm vs slower rpm.  This makes each week “feel” completely different but is similar enough that the body can adapt from week to week and a progressive training effect can occur.

If you used my profile from last week with your class, progress with this new one below and let me know how it goes.

[wlm_private ‘PRO-Platinum|PRO-Monthly|PRO-Gratis|PRO-Seasonal|Platinum-trial|Monthly-trial|PRO-Military|30-Days-of-PRO|90 Day PRO|Stages-Instructor|Schwinn-Instructor|Instructor-Bonus|28 Day Challenge']

 

A detailed profile to print

The_Power_of_3_Three_Sets_3_Times_Week 2

90 minute music mixed track used with this profile

Recording of me teaching this profile with Power on a Blade Ion

Recording of me teaching this profile with HR, RPM & RPE (NO Power) on a NXT

To download any of the above media on a Mac:

  1. Right Click on the blue underlined link
  2. Select “Download Linked File As”
  3. Select a download location
  4. Once file is completely downloaded, find it in the location you selected
  5. Drag the file into your iTunes or Spotify library OR
  6. Right Click on the file and Select “Open With”
  7. From the drop down menu select “iTunes” or “Spotify”
  8. File should begin playing and is now part of your iTunes or Spotify library

To download any of the above media on a PC:

  1. Right Click on the blue underlined link
  2. Select “Save Link As”
  3. Select a download location
  4. Once file is completely downloaded, find it in the location you selected
  5. Drag the file into your iTunes or Spotify library OR
  6. Right Click on the file and Select “Open With”
  7. From the drop down menu select “iTunes” or “Spotify”
  8. File should begin playing and is now part of your iTunes or Spotify library

Click here to watch a video on how to download media files from ICI/Pro.

 

.  [/wlm_private]