GeorgeD wrote:
I have tried the s10ps but have not had the fortitude to perservere with it long enough to gain the benefits that I believe are to be had - my fault not the ideas
George:
Have you read anything on the Woverine Plan from Mike Caviston? If you have, the rest of this post is a waste of your time, so sorry. If not, then putting two of these workouts a week into your schedule might be "fun".
A Level 4 workout is a series of continuous intervals, with each small interval at a defined rate and a defined pace. The pace for each rate is from a table which is indexed with your 2K time. For you, the 2K split of 1:43 gets you the following pace at each rate:
16 SPM 02:09
18 SPM 02:04
20 SPM 02:00
22 SPM 01:56
24 SPM 01:52
26 SPP 01:47
This table is strictly for the Level 4 workout and not some kind of ideal pace for a rate. The workout is a multiple 10 minutes, usually either 40' or 60'. The "preferred" length is probably 60', but you if you try this, you may want to start with 40'.
An "easy" start would be the following 2 - 10' sessions, rowed one after the other. For a 40' workout, just do it again and yet again for a 60'.
2'/2'/2'/2'/2' 16/18/20/18/16 This is a 176, 176 strokes in the 10'
4'/3'/2'/1' 16/18/20/22 This is a 180, 180 strokes in the 10'
So you start rowing at a rate of 16 and hold a pace of 2:09 for 2 minutes. Then you switch to a rate of 18 at a pace of 2:04, etc. Of course, you could up all the SPM by 2 and get a 196 for the first 10' and a 200 for the second 10'. I've done the math for you and if you did three of the above "easy start", for a 60' workout, you would cover 14,439 meters which would be an average pace of 2:04.6. But from the plan ".. due to the relationship between velocity and power, the average watts for the varying rate sequences will be higher than for the steady rate.." Also from the plan "..rowing at a given average pace with changing rates is more physically demanding than rowing at the same pace with a constant rate." You will also note that your total stokes in 60' will be 1,068 and since you will cover 14,439, your meters per stroke will be just over 13.5.
If you have not done this workout, while it will take several attempts, you will find that it goes by very fast. A 60' L4 workout goes by much faster for me than a 12K, which I am currently doing in just under 50'. Maybe it is the constant counting on which second to pull (one way to hold the steady rate) or whatever method you use to keep track of switching that prevents boredom.
The pace for a given rate is set for a "season". The way you train harder is to add more strokes in a given 10' period. There are almost an infinite number of possibilites and there are many common ones listed in the posted Wolverine Plan.
If you have never done this, I highly recommend it. I do three of the 60' pieces a week. If youve read the Wolverine Plan or portions before, sorry for the long winded post.
Jeff