The Elasticity of Time: The Hour

Inhaling a wasp aboard a borrowed Veloforma on the Alpenrose Velodrome.

The Theory of Special Relativity states that time for a moving object passes more quickly than for a stationary object. Einstein, in deriving this theory, demonstrated great insight and creative power for which he is considered perhaps the greatest mind in human history. If he had owned a set of rollers, however, he’d be considered a common idiot for recognizing what all Cyclists inherently know: that a two-minute interval on a trainer is interminably longer than the same amount of time on the open road. Similarly, an Hour on the track is a different animal altogether when compared to an hour’s training ride.

@scaler911, @G’rilla, and I met @VeloformaMark (founder, owner, chief product designer and engineer for Veloforma) at the Alpenrose Track circa 2:00pm on Saturday, June 15 to celebrate Festum Prophetae in the best way we know how: to ride The Hour. After introductions, Mark disappeared to retrieve the 2013 Velofroma Pista Pro he was loaning me while I slipped into my Hunchback Disguise V-Kit. Mark reappeared with one of the most stunning track mocheene’s I’ve laid eyes on – and I’ve seen at least four.

As we busied about trying to get my position right, Mark explained the engineering tolerances in seatpost extension and described how far we can go beyond the “max extension” mark (don’t try this at home, people, Mark is an expert). Impressive as they are, current engineering principles don’t accomodate for 1cm of air beyond the end of the seat post in order to get enough height. Modern engineering is similarly limiting when it comes to stem extension and saddle setback. The net result of these limitations was a saddle height three centimeters not high enough, a reach four centimeters not reachy enough, and a saddle set back an undisclosed amount not set back enough.

No sweat, I’ll just V it.

I hopped on and embarked on my first two practice laps. While my track experience is limited, I’ve ridden enough tracks around the world to know my way around a banking. Alpenrose is a short, steep, bumpy concrete track. So steep, in fact, that after my first two laps, I got off and had to swallow my heart down out of my throat. For a moment, I considered abandoning the ride on account of nothing more than how terrifying the banking is – even in the lowly Sprinter’s lane. With crashing speed for the corners in the lane sitting at around 25-30 kmph, it was more than enough to discourage an easy warmup lap.

As we fiddled with my gear length, I gradually became more comfortable with the track and before long I stopped soiling my bibs every time I finished a lap. We settled on a 91 inch gear with a symbolic 14T rear cog.

As the gun went off, I settled into 24 second laps, right on schedule. Then it hit me; with the saddle too low, too far forward, and the bars a bit too close, I couldn’t really get any power into the bike to be able to maintain my speed. I struggled with my mind, my body, and my bike for what seemed like a lifetime as I tried to maintain momentum. I didn’t know if I was 5 minutes into the effort, or 15. All I heard was my split for each lap: 24.3 – 24.5 – 25.4 – 23.3 – 25.6…I soon realized that while I was advised by the various track riders in attendance to ride the waterline – the outside of the Sprinters Lane on the straights (the ride line) and cut in to the inside of the Sprinters Lane on the corners (the black line), how well I did this meant I would gain or lose a second per lap.

I contemplated stopping about every 25 seconds for the first quarter hour, not knowing how long I’d been at it. When I heard Mark holler out that I’d passed fifteen minutes, it was immediately obvious that This Could Be Done – no sweat. This was going to be nothing compared to bonking on Haleakala at the halfway point. The next 30 minutes passed as I focussed on my line; the only thing I was aware of was my constantly slowing pace and my inability to do much about it. I wasn’t particularly tired, and wasn’t hurting aside from my aching back on account of the short position. After a few wobbly attempts, I learned how to stand up on a fixed gear in order to get some speed back into the thing. Eventually, I got into a routine of accelerating to tempo on the home stretch, and then riding out the gear as it slowed down on the remainder of the track.

Throughout, my track inexperience showed itself most plainly whenever I’d have a little lapse of concentration or a muscular twitch; the slightest mistake would send me up the banking in a disheartening speed-sapping uphill climb or down toward the Cote d’Azure and a terrifying appointment with the pavement on the apron.

For 55 minutes, this pattern developed and while my body started to show signs of the effort – like my right ass cheek burning from the force of turning left for an hour – it didn’t feel particularly long. Then came the last five minutes.

Out of the saddle to sprint, do what I can not to crash through the first two turns, then sprint on the back stretch. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat. A lifetime later, it was four minutes to go.

Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn.

Three minutes.

Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn.

Two minutes.

Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn.

One minute.

Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint. Turn. Sprint.

Ten more seconds.

Sprint some more. I couldn’t hear and had no idea how far I could go in 10 seconds. So I sprinted some more until I couldn’t sprint anymore and assumed I’d gone at least 10 more seconds, keeping in mind the slower clock of the stationary timers in @Scaler911 and @VeloformaMark’s hands.

Of the Hour I spent on the bike, the first 15 minutes were psychologically the hardest, and seemed interminable. When it came to the last V minutes, they seemed as long as the entire 55 minutes that came before it. Eistein should have been a Cyclist.

I thought the Hour would be a one-time affair, that I’d never try it again. I like to be proven wrong at least once a day, otherwise I’m not trying hard enough. @VeloformaMark is going to build me a custom seat post and stem to get my position perfect, and I’ll be back next Festum Prophetae to try again. In the end, I rode 139.25 laps at an unofficial distance of 37,317m. Next year I’ll come out a few days early, get the position dialed in, do a few good training blocks on the track prior, and have official timing equipment so the lads can heckle rather than be bothered with tapping the lap counter on their phones. I might even shoot for 42km or 43km. Just to be proven wrong again.

Special thanks to the community for voting on my time like you did; it’s a nice feeling disappointing a group rather than just myself for a change. Thanks to @VeloformaMark for loaning me a bike for the effort, for hanging out and helping with the timing, and for proactively starting to design gear for next year’s ride. Thanks to @Scaler911 and @G’rilla for supporting and helping in the recovery session afterwards – and thanks to @MrsScaler911 for her hospitality. Finally, thanks to PeepCode for loaning camera equipment, live streaming, and doing the editing of the video.

[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/frank@velominati.com/FPH2013/”/]

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • The ST and HT angles are the same for all 3 bikes BTW,I think there's a 1/4 degree difference between the Serenity and Dolan. Technically the Dolan is the biggest bike.

  • @frank Strong work on both the track and the book.  I love living vicariously through u whether it be foothills in Hawaii, gravel roads in Flanders, etc.  With all these activities you seem however to be neglecting the bullshit-blockers on the site as Mr. scatter pants et al have started to pop up with more frequency.  Is this an indication of the site's increasing popularity?  Keep up the good work and do some of that modem-scrotum stuff to filter out the trolls.

  • @frank

    @the pressure I've been trying to block @minion for years but he's a persistent little twat. I'll double my efforts.

    Yeah you'd need 2 conditions to ban me. I'd need to be wrong, and you'd need to have no fucken sense of humour. One of those things is impossible and the other unlikely. Imagine what Marcus'd be like round here without my guiding hand of restraint.

    @the pressure

    If you're talking about me, say so. Or explain how the point I'm making is incorrect.

  • @minion

    @frank

    @minion

    @scaler911

    @minion

    Nice! Dunno if a custom seatpost will fix your position though, more like a custom top tube...

    "That wasn't so bad". ?!?

    The owner of Veloforma said that they have the largest ava plastic track bike on the market right now at 59cm. At least I think I recall him saying that.

    Yeah, their geo page for the bike has the TT at 57.4cm, which would work well if Fa-fa-fa-fa-Fhronk put pursuit bars on there. Dolan and Marvel have XL sizes with 59 and 60cm top tubes respectively, based on a quick google search. Look will make him whatever the hell he wants, for about 15 grand.

    Depending on ht and st angle, I need about 59-60cm on the top tube. And we refer to a "market" as products or consumers that are available to us. Which means Dolan and Marvel are not in the market for the US.

    Fuck me you've never been more wrong. Serenity's address is 7918 Harwood Ave, Wauwatosa, WI 53213, United States and there are tons of yanks riding Dolans. There's this thing, it's called the internet, and you can like, buy stuff with it and junk. If you can get a Dolan in NZ from the UK you can get one in the states.

    Oh, and your efforts to find a frame that fits is likely to be even more trouble based on the differences in geo between road and track frames.  My recent purchase of a 52cm top tube track frame to match my 52 cm TT road frame puts me on a 14cm stem rather than a 12cm that's on the road bike.  This puts me beyond the UCI mandate for handlebar reach to be less than 5cm forward of the front axle.

    In order for you to get the reach you need, you'd likely be on a stupid long stem.

    By extrapolation (probably totally wrong, but hey this is the interwebs) most any hour record you produced would have commisares springing out of the bushes with plumb bobs and a measuring tape.

  • @mouse Yep. I ride 56 tt on my road bike and 110mm stem, and I ride a 57 tt track bike with 120mm stem. 60cm is the biggest carbon track bike I know of, but with few people buying track bikes to begin with, and fewer buying ones that big, it's no surprise that they're pretty rare. That and custom frames can be had for similar pricing to some of the higher end stuff, admittedly in al or steel but still very good. It's a shame Tiemeyer has shut up shop, that's for sure.

  • Kinda. The track's a complete mess, it's badly designed and constructed, The council has allocated 650,000 to fix it, and it's supposed to be repaired by December. If they fix it properly it'll be heaps better, but if not at least it'll be open again.

  • @minion Perhaps adding a track event to a Canberra Cogal would get the punters out. December/January would give enough warning for people to make plans. Hmmm....

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