V And V Makes VV: Haleakala Round IIV
I can’t really call it an obsession. If it was an obsession, I would have commissioned a bloke I’ve never met to build me a set of ultra-light wheels and I would have spent an outrageous amount of money to upgrade my handlebars in an identical shape from aluminum to carbon in an effort to shave a few grams off the top end of my machine. After all, science has proven that buying lighter gear is a more effective strategy for climbing faster than that weight-weenie bullshit like quitting beer or steak.
Alright, so maybe I’m obsessed. But it’s not an all-consuming obsession – not obsessive obsession. Its more like a weighty thought that bends all the other less weighty thoughts towards it, like Einstein described why gravity bends light. It started less than a single Cognitive Unit after the VMH informed me of my time up the mountain on Part Deux. (A Cognitive Unit, obviously, is the unit of time it takes one to process any piece of information after the dishing up of a massive helping of Rule V.) It was around that time that my thoughts started warping towards riding Haleakala again – faster.
It started in low, then it started to grow. No, I’m not quoting How the Grinch Stole Christmas; I’m describing what happened after my gut was accosted by the Holiday Season. I’m fat, I’m out of shape, and I’m slow. What training I’ve been doing has been done in Seattle around the freezing point in stubbornly wet weather. Maui, on the other hand, insists on having warm weather – something I’m unaccustomed to – and the forecast for the coming week is hot, hot, and hotter. Despite Ryder Hesjedal setting the record up the climb during this time of year, the conventional wisdom around these here parts is that this is the worst time of year to try for a personal record up Haleakala.
You will understand, then, that this is the perfect time for me to leave a lung or two on Crater Road for the third time running. Assuming the weather holds and D.S. @Gianni, Coach VMH (whose “coaching” consists mostly of chastising and comparing me to small and adorable yet unwanted rodents), and @MauiBike fail to come up with compelling reasons to move the effort to another date, I will be visiting Pele for the third time on New Years Day, 2013.
Prognosticate on my upcoming ride at your own risk. For your reading and viewing entertainment, the two previous editions of Frank vs. The Volcano are provided here: Frank vs. The Volcano // Frank vs. The Volcano, Part Deux.
Happy New Year to all of you – and thanks heaps for such great support. I’m still too braindead to figure out who won, but we’ll get to that tomorrow.
Third time running, all y’all keep making this fun to try at.
Cheers.
In addition, I was just now notified by Strava that Frank beat my KOM on a hilly street HERE IN SEATTLE! Today!
How does he do it?
@frank
Fronk’s words to the gale:
Congratulations Frank…Great Effort!
(p.s. the text pops ups could do with being about a second longer each time for those of us who were mesmerised by your magnificent stroke it was a little rushed catching every word that popped up)
Well done Frank, one hell of a ride!
Frank, off cutting down the rain forest in FL for the wicked step so I missed the whole show, bets, taunts and cheers… So happy you killed the giant again and with such panache!
Now I am going to have nightmares about what is happening post ride in DS Gianni’s beach side party shack.
Happy new year to you both and send best wishes to the long suffering VMH’s.
Awesome Ride Frank ! Congrats !
Great Job Frank! And you’re warm too. Fucking cold in the PNW right now…….
Very impressive! I think everyone wants to get down there to tackle that beast sometime (not to mention some other local perks). Until then, we live vicariously. Chapeau!
Good job Frank, you smashed it!
Chapeau Frank!
3:42.45. Good luck, and have a “blast”. Volcano pun intended.
Nice work Frank – Chapeau!
Late to the party, but from wintery Denmark, best wishes for a happy and prosperous New Year to all you noble Velominati out there – and kudos to the merry Frankster. 3.41.49, eh? That’s pretty awesome… Strong work, sir.
Official time was: 3:41:54.9 – who came closest?
@frank I’m thinking that my prediction of 3:41.55 is going to be difficult to beat! You couldn’t have hesitated for just 1/10th of a second on that last pedal stroke, now could you? You already had your PR in the bag!
Chapeau Frank. Is there going to be another video of Gianni’s DS antics?
@frank
Nice effort Frank.I noticed few things though.From your new photos it looks like you changed your set up a bit.Since I don’t care about the direction of the fizik bartape finishing sticker I’d like to know what’s the reason you tilted up your new rotundos and why placing record shifters at such an angle.Do you feel discomfort on classic bars?
@Nate
So which Marc Madiot was Gianni channelling? The one that saw his rider fail to break 3:30?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q90ph-N4Abw
Or was it a more happy Gianni as his rider broke his PB?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=GYy9gp6OVYw
I was one digit off. THe hour digit.
@frank I was 3:41:49–a whopping 5.9 secs too fast. I must have miscalculated the advantage of your new Café Roubaix wheels. Good enough for 2nd place? (dble post error)
Strong work Frank. It inspired me to drag my bloated carcass out yesterday for my first ride of the year.
I suspect you may have been faster even though my ride was fairly flat. On the plus side, I did manage to prove fairly conclusively that alcohol is not as good as blood at transporting oxygen around the body.
BUT did you ride down as well or was it treated as a mountain top finish?
@Gianni
Alright, moving slowly here…I’m on vacation afterall. But it looks like the winner is @Duende on account of being only 1/100th of a second over (we’re not playing Price is Right rules, whatever that is, we’re just saying who is the closest…)
@the farmer
I think that to anyone who hasn’t ridden Haleakala, the notion of riding down seems very seductive. When you’re at the top, though, you’ll quickly realize that riding down is beyond idiotic.
On the other hand, the section from 6,000 feet to 4,000 feet is possibly the best road for descending you’ll ever find, anywhere. Its great to do a Demi Haleakla (from about 1,000 feet to 6,000 feet) and catch the descent.
@TommyTubolare
No discomfort at all, and the bars are basically at the same angle that they’ve been at for years on the alu Rotundos. I like the bars at that angle as it allows for a very natural wrist angle, and similarly the hoods (mounted on the bars such that the levers are flush with the bottom of the bars) allow for a natural angle as well.
I’ve ridden bars over the years at every angle and experimented with generating tension through having the hoods nice and low – I love how it looks, but I’ve found that having the hoods up more lets me pull better and generate more leverage. Especially since I’ve been climbing more, I find this position more beneficial. When I rode the flats more, however, I had them lower.
There is some footage in the video I’m working on that has me from the side, I’ll be curious if you see anything unusual about the position.
@frank I’ve got a pair of Haleakalas coming from Dan_R in the next couple of months. You’ve got me as giddy as a school girl with your reports of this week’s vanquishing of the volcano. CAN.NOT.WAIT.FOR.MY.HALEAKALAS. And, again, way to kick that volcano’s ass.
@frank Though I would love to be able to take credit for having predicted your time to within 1/100th of a second, I will have to content myself with having been a full 1/10th of a second off. Still, the experience has left me wondering toward what other ends I might turn my newly-discovered power of prognostication!
@Duende
Wait a minute! I thought we were playing by the Price Is Right rules! (Oh the agony.)
@frank
What reasons?
@frank
Spot. Fucking. On.
Chapeau Frank.
@Jeff in PetroMetro
I am licking my chops just thinking about the build!
@Jeff in PetroMetro
Well, you still have to pedal the bike – but the wheels are incredible. What you notice the most is that they spin up so easily, and since climbing is basically a non-stop acceleration, they really make a big difference. Especially when the gradient changes and you need to keep your momentum going.
I found myself riding out of the saddle a lot more too, the bike would just spring to life instantly – something that was helped as well by the stiffer bars when I was leaning my fat torso on them.
But like I say, you still have to pedal the bike, they don’t resolve that issue…
I think I can answer for Frank about why you don’t merrily descend Haleakala after climbing it: you’re fucking DESTROYED. Summit temperature was maybe 10 C the day I was crushed by the ascent, and I had trouble staying warm while stationary and bundled in fleece. I’d planned on riding down, and was more than happy to relegate that plan to ‘another time’.
This photo of me at the beach offers some insight into why I might have climbed slower than I had hoped.
@frank
congrats on the weight loss! U look so much better!
Get in my belly!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YoY_Fahp_Qc
@frank
And henceforth, you shall be known as Mr Creosote.
@frank
I’m going to use this for my Gravatar.
@frank
Frank noooooooooo – why are you not wearing a top – do you really want to break our hearts by disobeying Rule #7 in January.
I mean what’s next? A Rule #8 violation with some fancy coloured bar tape?
It’s like finding out the pope has sex at weekends…
@wiscot
Voila!
And looky here – Mr Creosote also has some fancy wheels that make him go faster!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0gs29sF7mcs
You may be turning Scottish Frank…
@frahnk
as you yanks say: good jarb. it would inneresting to find out how your superfly wheelset compared to a factory set
@the Engine
Don’t worry, I used megatons of sun screen and my tan lines are sharp as ever. In fact, they’re actually visible. (It is January, after all.)
Just wanted to say that the record has been broken.
What a climb.
http://www.strava.com/activities/99917806
@rodd heino
Holy shit! He destroyed that climb and even road back down.
I pay a quick visit each day some blogs and information sites to read content, except this website presents feature
based articles.