I have had my road bike now for six months, the best average speed i've managed up till now is 20.5mph, but thats only over 40 mile ( my goal is to keep that average or a little more, maybe 21mph over greater distances like 60 mile then 80 mile). I am 43 and ride alone as well
. I am as curious as you are to know how i compare with other fellow cyclists as well?
Keep pushing
I fall in the middle of age, I am 44. I ride plenty of miles. Started this spring avg speed for a almost 40 mile ride 14. I improved to about 18.5 last time I did it. If you are "training" to improve speed, there are workouts to improve them. I personally like to ride for a challenge and achievement. My experience on a metric century was I was above most riders, I only drafted about 10 miles or so, rode the rest solo.
I am no expert, I ride a 25 year old road bike that I love, I know new gear would make me a little faster, I also like to compare myself. I go by how I feel on rides and do it for the joy and fitness. Do some charity distance rides, and see how you hold up. We all have lost daylight now and I just was humbled on a set of rollers and a training video last night. I can ride for hours on the road, but a half hour of training video was as tough as I rode all summer. Lastly, if you ride all flats, I think with good training we all can go faster, but sometimes its not the pace its the ride.
Well...I am 31, I ride a 2 yr old full carbon/ultegra/105 mix road bike but only average about 14.5 mph. I keep my heart rate around 160 and hit 190ish on steep longer climbs. I do stop at stop signs etc but pretty much try and keep it going.
I have an artificial disc in my back and other "excuses" but I think genetics is my enemy. Same as I am not going to play in the superbowl and am highly unlikely to play center for the lakers...
I am more like chefrdr (partially out of necessity...no way I am going to have a shot at winning a local crit) in that I compare myself to myself and enjoy the road.
Jodaddy, Here are my stats from a Polar i720 since 01/01/2005 to today, I'm 49 years old, be 50 in January. I live in Idaho but those mile have come from all over the United States as I travel for a living, some were flat some were hilly, some were climbs. Many of the miles have been on a Ritchey Breakaway or a Seven Axiom Ti. Miles - 36,743.4 , Speed avg - 16.6 , Heart Rate avg. - 133 , Ascent -1,211,857' , Kcal - 2,424,482, It's always good to ask upon yourself, if you are where you need to be, but most importantly it is to enjoy the ride. Tires Down, keep it safe! bc
As I creep up on 60, My commuting speed has stayed the same for the past 16 years at about 14-16 mph. On century rides away from the city my avg is 17/18. I have no dreams of winning much other than the occasional Senior Olympic event since a bad crash 5 years ago that resulted in a knee rebuild. Prior to that I was competing regularly with avg speeds of 22-24mph for the 20k and 40k events. The best way to get better is to ride more and with someone slighly faster who will give you a good rabbit to chase... Ride safe.
Chefrdr, you mention "training" to improve speed. I've always been a pretty relaxed rider, but am looking to start to push myself a bit more and pick my speed up. I average 28-30km/h over a 50km or so ride and 25 over a 100km ride. Any tips on where to start looking for info on training to improve speed?
While I am not the expert, I have done myself just intervals of sprints mixed in my normal ride. My process is simple, I jump into my big gears and pedal increased cadence and speed until I feel my rate drop, then I go back to "normal" pace for recovery. That may not be the best for everyone, it worked some for me. There are two websites i found in addition to just looking at all posts here, there is probably older training tips in older forums as well.
active.com and training4cyclists.com, and I am sure you could find books as well. The other section on this site maybe signing up and exploring the challenge sections. I inadvertently did the 300 miles in 30 days which is one of the challenges on here. They have training plans in addition right on here. I would defer you to better experts than me for better training tips. Happy riding
Almost 50 y/o. Rode for years and took 10 yrs off for younger kids. Now back on bike for 10 years. Years 1-8 just rode lots of miles regardless of speed. Last year started upping tempo and intensity. This year more so. I now ride fewer miles, but more intense ones. My weight is lower, I feel better and have better ability to ride long distances if I choose to. Biggest changes: 1) riding hills. Used to hate them, now i look for them. I ride faster on the flats now that i'm a better climber. 2) Starting at a higher level of training and lower weight each spring. I used to take several months off each winter, and gained a lot of weight. Now i watch my weight over the winter and try to keep my activity level up even when we have 104" of snow in a winter (last winter).
Jim
Fresno, CA rider here, so lots of flat in town, but Sierra Nevadas to climb to the East.
On a fast ride, ranging from 1 hour to 2.5 hours, I average around 18.5-19mph right now, that's with an average HR of around 155 to 160 bpm.
Longer rides, which I'm still working up to are a little slower, 17 to 17.5mph with average HR 150 to 155 bpm; my last ride which was my longest ever so far, was 63 miles in 3 hours 40 something minutes when I rode up to a little town called Prather in the Sierra foothills. That ride included around 1,700 feet of climbing.
On a very fast ride, 1 hour, the best I've done is 20.01mph with an average HR of 171 bpm, but that was after doing a 30 minute 173 bpm/20.5 mph average the day before, so I wasn't rested.
I'm trying to work up to riding to Shaver Lake, which would be an 88 mile ride with more than 5,500 feet of climbing. I ride around 150 to 200 miles a week right now, looking to increase that. I've never done interval training for speed, but I need to.
I regularly reach 20-22mph and faster on flats on my rides because of tailwinds, add in the head winds and an entire ride averages slower. My max HR is maybe 190, and on one hill (slight 1% or 2% grade, and usually 10mph headwind), I like to sprint and usually get up to 26-27mph and 185-190 bpm.
Central FL here. I'm 47 and just got a road bike and started riding this Spring and really love it and love challenging myself to always get better. I have become quite enthusiastic abour road biking and I read everything I can get my hands on. 17 mph as an average is right on track for solo riding in our age groupl when you consider the slow speeds of stop lights and the higher speeds of tailwinds or downhills. I have found the best way to increase speeds is riding with a little faster group at least weekly. If you are drafting more than half the ride, you should then have an average of about 19mph to be on track to be within the top 25% of most riders. Hills and doing sprints will make you stronger and faster. I found if I keep doing the same thing, no matter how hard, I just build endurance to do more and am able to go longer and longer. But I only get more power and speed by changing it up with varied interval training which can be rather painful when pushing to a new and different max, but the rewards do come quick.
People who race in groups are in quite a different category however, and will frequently have averages between 25 mph and 28mph. I am working on getting as close to that as possible eventually and try to push it at least weekly with all out sprints for at least 30 seconds or more, preferably on days without a lot of wind. I can ride between 23 and 25 for a while, but can't seem to maintain it longer than 20-30 minutes yet, but given my progress over 6 months, I know I could if I trained hard more often which I intend to do. As long as I keep improving I am motivated to keep doing more. I also occasionally find different groups to ride with that are faster and although I sometimes can't keep up, the workout until then is very helpful. If you don't find a local group on map my ride, check out the websites of your area bike shops for organized rides, or better yet make friends with people in the bike stores who can invite you on many less organized rides of just people who love to ride and train.
My profile is public and I think that means you can look at my training log. Just holding the mouse over the bike logo on a day will give you the summary of each day quickly. I started on a mountain bike in February so you can see my slow starting point and I started on a road bike on 3//12. I too like to compare to and chat with others to guage how I am progressing, share info and encourage each other, so anyone who reads this and/or looks at my profile, please add me as a friend so we can chat and compare.
Happy riding and I hope you keep reaching all your riding and fitness goals!
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