Anonymous wrote:This is OP. One thing I find frustrating -- I wish that they'd list in the description of the PZ class which zones you'll be working in. Is there some other way to determine that? (Like are all PZE classes 2 and 3, and all PZ classes 3-5, or something?). Or maybe it IS listed and I'm missing it?
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. One thing I find frustrating -- I wish that they'd list in the description of the PZ class which zones you'll be working in. Is there some other way to determine that? (Like are all PZE classes 2 and 3, and all PZ classes 3-5, or something?). Or maybe it IS listed and I'm missing it?
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. One thing I find frustrating -- I wish that they'd list in the description of the PZ class which zones you'll be working in. Is there some other way to determine that? (Like are all PZE classes 2 and 3, and all PZ classes 3-5, or something?). Or maybe it IS listed and I'm missing it?
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. One thing I find frustrating -- I wish that they'd list in the description of the PZ class which zones you'll be working in. Is there some other way to determine that? (Like are all PZE classes 2 and 3, and all PZ classes 3-5, or something?). Or maybe it IS listed and I'm missing it? [/quote
For new classes, there is not, though CDE will sometimes preview her classes on social media. PZE will always be only zones 2 and 3. PZ Max will always include zone 6 or 7 pushes. regular PZ classes could be almost anything. For older classes, I think the information on zones is available through the app mPaceline (iOS app). Also, there are FB groups in which people will post their charts and you can see from that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two things:
PZ endurance classes are not supposed to be as strenuous as the average theme class done at a high intensity.
Many beginners don't take the FTP test properly, so their zones are not as high as they really should be. The FTP is absolute all-out effort. You should feel like you are about to pass out at the end, and you really need to be giving close to an all-out effort the whole time. If you ride too low for the first 18 minutes and then push it at the end, you will feel like you're dying at the end, but your zones will be lower than they should be. Basically, about 3 minutes into the test, you should already feel like you are dying and be doubting your decisions in life.
NP here, and this is really helpful! But also why I am absolutely terrified to try it. Is it worth it, in your opinion?
DP: it’s worth it, but you shouldn’t be dying three minutes in. It’s a 20 minute ride, and if you flame out early, you won’t hit your maximum average output. I say this as a former competitive rower: our distance races were 20’-ish, and you absolutely had to pace yourself. It’s the same thing here. It should be hard throughout, but you shouldn’t start dying until you have about five minutes left. More, and you’ll gas yourself too early.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two things:
PZ endurance classes are not supposed to be as strenuous as the average theme class done at a high intensity.
Many beginners don't take the FTP test properly, so their zones are not as high as they really should be. The FTP is absolute all-out effort. You should feel like you are about to pass out at the end, and you really need to be giving close to an all-out effort the whole time. If you ride too low for the first 18 minutes and then push it at the end, you will feel like you're dying at the end, but your zones will be lower than they should be. Basically, about 3 minutes into the test, you should already feel like you are dying and be doubting your decisions in life.
NP here, and this is really helpful! But also why I am absolutely terrified to try it. Is it worth it, in your opinion?