Posted by Will on Monday, January 26, 2009 at 1:41 PM

My wife and I bought a treadmill before Christmas of last year.  It has been great to be able to run regardless of the weather or daylight this winter.  A couple of days ago the weather was warm so I headed outside for the first time in a while.  I was running on a known course – the arboretum at UK - and realize that I seemed to be running at a faster pace based on perceived effort compared to my perceived treadmill effort.  If anything, it should be the other way around.  My guess was that the treadmill was reporting a slower speed than it was actually moving at.  But how do you calibrate a treadmill?  The manual gave a procedure for calibration that allowed the roller diameter to be adjusted prior to running through an automatic calibration procedure.  So here’s how I did it.

I have a bicycle, a wind trainer (rear wheel clamp style), and a bike computer (speedometer).  The following could be done without a wind trainer, but it makes the whole thing a lot easier.  My particular computer (Cateye Astrale 8) uses a rear wheel speed sensor.  I made sure the bike computer was properly configured with the wheel circumference.  I then clamped the rear wheel in the wind trainer as per normal use and positioned the bike such that the front wheel was on the treadmill belt as if I were going to ride the bike on the treadmill.  Next I moved the trainer forward on the floor behind the treadmill until the rear wheel made contact with the belt.  I checked that there were no obstructions then turned on the treadmill at its slowest speed.  As the belt moved it turned the wheels showing the speed of the belt.  I tested the treadmill at six, eight, and ten miles per hour and found it to be moving about 0.2 mph fast.  That is, when the treadmill said eight mph the bike computer said 8.2 mph. 

From here on it was just a slow process of trail and error.  I went through the set up procedure for calibrating the treadmill, each time increasing the setting for the size of the rollers by a couple of points.  I finally arrived at a setting of 2.89 as opposed to the setting of 2.81 listed in the manual.  Once the speeds agreed I let the whole setup run for a few miles to see if the distances would match up as well.  A small difference in speed between the treadmill and bike computer – both of which only read to a tenth of a mile per hour – would easily show up over a distance of a few miles.  Overall I found the two to match up well with the treadmill running perhaps .05 mph faster, which is fine for me. 

Comments [0]     Categories: Treadmill              
Posted by Will on Monday, January 12, 2009 at 3:57 PM

Gels (GU, Hammer Gel, Clif Shot) are handy on long training runs.  I like to have calories on hand for distances over 10 miles on the road or over about 75-80 minutes on trails.  I've used GUs and Clif Shots and like them both.  They are light, compact, and convenient.  The downside is that gels, and energy bars for that matter, are expensive.  I like cheap.  I also like tinkering. 

The nutrition info on the label boils down to maltodextrin and amino acids.  Maltodextrin is a carbohydrate; that's the fuel.  And the amino acids?  Leucine, valine, isoleucine, and histadine are listed in the GU nutrition info.  Clif Shot lists none, although it does list electrolytes (salts like magnesium and potassium).  Given that these are competing products the difference in content caused me to question the importance of the amino acids.  Further digging turned up a great series of three podcasts by six-time Ironman champion Dave Scott where he talks about replacing calories during training and racing.  In addition to his advice the site provides associated charts (taken from from the book, The Performance Zone: Your Nutrition Action Plan for Greater Endurance & Sports Performance by Dr. John Ivy, Ph. D, and Dr. Robert Portman, Ph D.) that pretty much lay out exactly what should be in a sports drink.  Fair warning - the podcast site is sponsored by Accelerade.  Nevertheless, the details are there and agree with the other sources I found both on the web and in research journals.  So apparently carbohydrates and proteins in a 4:1 ratio along with some salts and a little vitamin C is what should be in a sports drink.  And what is a gel if not a  super-concentrated sports drink?

An exhausting, if not exhaustive, search of local and online sources led me to BulkNutrition.com as a source for both maltodextrin and whey protein.  Whey protein is complete (contains all 20 amino acids) and has the highest biological value of any known protein source.  I ordered the maltodextrin and whey protein made by Now Foods.  The whey protein mixture itself contains some carbohydrates as it is intended for use as a drink mix.  Based on my calculations to account for the carbohydrates in the whey protein mix, 90g of maltodextrin and 40g of whey protein mix would combine to yield five 100 calorie servings with the overall 4:1 ratio of carbohydrate to protein.

If you’ve never seen an energy gel imagine pancake syrup, only thicker.  How do you get from 130g of powder to 5oz. of thick gel?  This is one detail I still haven’t figured out.  I mixed my 90g of maltodextrin and 40g of whey powder with 5oz. of bottled water.  I tried using less water, but when I did the mixture was too thick to stir.  Heating the mixture seems like an obvious answer, but I was and still am afraid of degrading the amino acids.  In my former life as a biologist I autoclaved bacterial media all the time, but I’m not sure what the crucial temperature would be.  If you have any suggestions or experience please leave a comment.  In the meantime, I coaxed the thick, mildly sweet mixture into newly purchased, empty 2 oz. shampoo travel tubes from Walmart. 

Voila, energy batter.

I’ve gone through a couple of batches of this stuff so far.  It’s not optimal, but it works.  I estimated the price per 100 calories to be under 30 cents as opposed to just over a dollar for a GU or Clif Shot.  That kind of savings adds up when you start using a half dozen or more of these a week.  My next experiment will be to see if I can make a maltodextrin only style gel ala Clif Shot by boiling the solution.

Comments [2]     Categories: Nutrition              
Posted by Will on Wednesday, January 07, 2009 at 11:02 PM

Below is a growing list of possible races for 2009:

Comments [0]     Categories: Racing              
Posted by Will on Monday, January 05, 2009 at 8:06 PM

I've made my first race commitment of 2009.  I signed up to run the Country Music Half Marathon.  I've got a friend that recently moved to Nashville.  He and another old friend and I are all going to run together.  It feels good to have a set training goal for the new year.  I may slide a 5K or 10K in late February or early March to gage my progress.  I had considered trying to run all four races in the Southwest Ohio 50K Trail Series, but the first series race is on the same day as the half.  The half is a more reasonable return to racing given that I haven't competed in about ten years.  All four of those 50K's would probably be too big a bite for 2009.  I have to remember to view 2009 as a (re)building year.  I've accumulated just under 400 miles since late August so I have a decent base on which to begin more intensive training. 

Comments [1]     Categories: Racing