How to slow yourself down (for playing nice with others)How much rest (tendon or ligament), for a novice?How to warm up / stretch and cool down?How to train for a long tour?How can one estimate drag for a bicycle?How to build a Camping trailer, and riding across country with itHow to “shop” for bikes via mail orderI've decided on Bar End Shifters for my Vintage tour bike rebuild. I think I've got it down to these. Any reason to choose one or other?Pacing for 90km time trial with heart rate monitorHow should I train for gravel rallies?Is a Surly front rack compatible with tubus mount for eyeless forks?

Remove color cast in darktable?

Is it a good idea to copy a trader when investing?

Why did Captain America age?

How to get a ellipse shaped node in Tikz Network?

Further factorisation of a difference of cubes?

How is CoreiX like Corei5, i7 is related to Haswell, Ivy Bridge?

How can I avoid subordinates and coworkers leaving work until the last minute, then having no time for revisions?

Has magnetic core memory been used beyond the Moon?

What is wrong with my code? RGB potentiometer

Best species to breed to intelligence

Is every story set in the future "science fiction"?

Why was wildfire not used during the Battle of Winterfell?

Why is it wrong to *implement* myself a known, published, widely believed to be secure crypto algorithm?

What do "KAL." and "A.S." stand for in this inscription?

Is ‘despite that’ right?

How to find the tex encoding of specific fonts?

If a character drops a magic item that turns on/off, does that item turn off when they drop it?

Series that evaluates to different values upon changing order of summation

Was the Highlands Ranch shooting the 115th mass shooting in the US in 2019

Is a vertical stabiliser needed for straight line flight in a glider?

We are two immediate neighbors who forged our own powers to form concatenated relationship. Who are we?

Is it nonsense to say B -> [A -> B]?

Improving Sati-Sampajañña (situative wisdom)

How to select certain lines (n, n+4, n+8, n+12...) from the file?



How to slow yourself down (for playing nice with others)


How much rest (tendon or ligament), for a novice?How to warm up / stretch and cool down?How to train for a long tour?How can one estimate drag for a bicycle?How to build a Camping trailer, and riding across country with itHow to “shop” for bikes via mail orderI've decided on Bar End Shifters for my Vintage tour bike rebuild. I think I've got it down to these. Any reason to choose one or other?Pacing for 90km time trial with heart rate monitorHow should I train for gravel rallies?Is a Surly front rack compatible with tubus mount for eyeless forks?













3















I have a road/touring bike that I take on longer rides with other folks. Sometimes other folks are riders of similar ability, and sometimes not. When I ride with people who ride slower, rather than changing my touring configuration (more upright bike, getting rid of clipless shoes/pedals) I'd like to just add some resistance to slow myself down/make myself work harder on the bike: this would make me go same speed as other folks while training harder than I would otherwise. I can imagine attaching an old-style bottle generator, but are there other good ways of adding drag/resistance to an existing bike setup?










share|improve this question







New contributor



angelatlarge is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.



















  • Welcome to the site. It might depend on what degree you want to slow down by. What kind of pace do you ride at and how much slower/less experienced do you mean? What is the aim of the ride? Would the others be interested in holding your wheel or are they rolling along separately enjoying the view?

    – Swifty
    7 hours ago






  • 2





    Buy the oldest, cheapest, heaviest, most badly maintained bike you can find off Craigslist and ride that on group rides

    – Argenti Apparatus
    7 hours ago











  • A fat bike also offers resistance training; but is not usually the ‘cheap’ option.

    – Erika
    5 hours ago











  • Downshift, and work on getting your cadence higher. Or wear really baggy clothes.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    2 hours ago











  • If you want drag on your bike: farm9.static.flickr.com/8444/7955051946_b3527e168c_b.jpg

    – Daniel R Hicks
    16 mins ago















3















I have a road/touring bike that I take on longer rides with other folks. Sometimes other folks are riders of similar ability, and sometimes not. When I ride with people who ride slower, rather than changing my touring configuration (more upright bike, getting rid of clipless shoes/pedals) I'd like to just add some resistance to slow myself down/make myself work harder on the bike: this would make me go same speed as other folks while training harder than I would otherwise. I can imagine attaching an old-style bottle generator, but are there other good ways of adding drag/resistance to an existing bike setup?










share|improve this question







New contributor



angelatlarge is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.



















  • Welcome to the site. It might depend on what degree you want to slow down by. What kind of pace do you ride at and how much slower/less experienced do you mean? What is the aim of the ride? Would the others be interested in holding your wheel or are they rolling along separately enjoying the view?

    – Swifty
    7 hours ago






  • 2





    Buy the oldest, cheapest, heaviest, most badly maintained bike you can find off Craigslist and ride that on group rides

    – Argenti Apparatus
    7 hours ago











  • A fat bike also offers resistance training; but is not usually the ‘cheap’ option.

    – Erika
    5 hours ago











  • Downshift, and work on getting your cadence higher. Or wear really baggy clothes.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    2 hours ago











  • If you want drag on your bike: farm9.static.flickr.com/8444/7955051946_b3527e168c_b.jpg

    – Daniel R Hicks
    16 mins ago













3












3








3








I have a road/touring bike that I take on longer rides with other folks. Sometimes other folks are riders of similar ability, and sometimes not. When I ride with people who ride slower, rather than changing my touring configuration (more upright bike, getting rid of clipless shoes/pedals) I'd like to just add some resistance to slow myself down/make myself work harder on the bike: this would make me go same speed as other folks while training harder than I would otherwise. I can imagine attaching an old-style bottle generator, but are there other good ways of adding drag/resistance to an existing bike setup?










share|improve this question







New contributor



angelatlarge is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I have a road/touring bike that I take on longer rides with other folks. Sometimes other folks are riders of similar ability, and sometimes not. When I ride with people who ride slower, rather than changing my touring configuration (more upright bike, getting rid of clipless shoes/pedals) I'd like to just add some resistance to slow myself down/make myself work harder on the bike: this would make me go same speed as other folks while training harder than I would otherwise. I can imagine attaching an old-style bottle generator, but are there other good ways of adding drag/resistance to an existing bike setup?







training touring-bikes






share|improve this question







New contributor



angelatlarge is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










share|improve this question







New contributor



angelatlarge is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor



angelatlarge is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








asked 8 hours ago









angelatlargeangelatlarge

1162




1162




New contributor



angelatlarge is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




New contributor




angelatlarge is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.














  • Welcome to the site. It might depend on what degree you want to slow down by. What kind of pace do you ride at and how much slower/less experienced do you mean? What is the aim of the ride? Would the others be interested in holding your wheel or are they rolling along separately enjoying the view?

    – Swifty
    7 hours ago






  • 2





    Buy the oldest, cheapest, heaviest, most badly maintained bike you can find off Craigslist and ride that on group rides

    – Argenti Apparatus
    7 hours ago











  • A fat bike also offers resistance training; but is not usually the ‘cheap’ option.

    – Erika
    5 hours ago











  • Downshift, and work on getting your cadence higher. Or wear really baggy clothes.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    2 hours ago











  • If you want drag on your bike: farm9.static.flickr.com/8444/7955051946_b3527e168c_b.jpg

    – Daniel R Hicks
    16 mins ago

















  • Welcome to the site. It might depend on what degree you want to slow down by. What kind of pace do you ride at and how much slower/less experienced do you mean? What is the aim of the ride? Would the others be interested in holding your wheel or are they rolling along separately enjoying the view?

    – Swifty
    7 hours ago






  • 2





    Buy the oldest, cheapest, heaviest, most badly maintained bike you can find off Craigslist and ride that on group rides

    – Argenti Apparatus
    7 hours ago











  • A fat bike also offers resistance training; but is not usually the ‘cheap’ option.

    – Erika
    5 hours ago











  • Downshift, and work on getting your cadence higher. Or wear really baggy clothes.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    2 hours ago











  • If you want drag on your bike: farm9.static.flickr.com/8444/7955051946_b3527e168c_b.jpg

    – Daniel R Hicks
    16 mins ago
















Welcome to the site. It might depend on what degree you want to slow down by. What kind of pace do you ride at and how much slower/less experienced do you mean? What is the aim of the ride? Would the others be interested in holding your wheel or are they rolling along separately enjoying the view?

– Swifty
7 hours ago





Welcome to the site. It might depend on what degree you want to slow down by. What kind of pace do you ride at and how much slower/less experienced do you mean? What is the aim of the ride? Would the others be interested in holding your wheel or are they rolling along separately enjoying the view?

– Swifty
7 hours ago




2




2





Buy the oldest, cheapest, heaviest, most badly maintained bike you can find off Craigslist and ride that on group rides

– Argenti Apparatus
7 hours ago





Buy the oldest, cheapest, heaviest, most badly maintained bike you can find off Craigslist and ride that on group rides

– Argenti Apparatus
7 hours ago













A fat bike also offers resistance training; but is not usually the ‘cheap’ option.

– Erika
5 hours ago





A fat bike also offers resistance training; but is not usually the ‘cheap’ option.

– Erika
5 hours ago













Downshift, and work on getting your cadence higher. Or wear really baggy clothes.

– Daniel R Hicks
2 hours ago





Downshift, and work on getting your cadence higher. Or wear really baggy clothes.

– Daniel R Hicks
2 hours ago













If you want drag on your bike: farm9.static.flickr.com/8444/7955051946_b3527e168c_b.jpg

– Daniel R Hicks
16 mins ago





If you want drag on your bike: farm9.static.flickr.com/8444/7955051946_b3527e168c_b.jpg

– Daniel R Hicks
16 mins ago










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















6














  • Focussing on the "training harder" aspect of your question:

A simple way for training hard while keeping your speed comparatively low would be to increase your cadence.



The easiest approach: Try switching a gear or two lower than you normally feel comfortable with, meaning you will have to pedal faster to keep the same speed.



One of the advantages of high candence cycling is less force on your legs, and therefore accumulated fatigue, leading to a faster recovery after a long ride.



There is actually a nice GCN youtube video on this topic: GCN: Improve Your High Cadence Cycling.



  • Focussing on the "playing nice" aspect of your question:

You could offer to carry a bigger share of supplies and equipment. Collect those spare tubes, an emergency pump, patches, and maybe an extra water bottle, and the additional weight will make it certainly more challenging for you (and easier for your companions), especially if your tour includes some nice climbs.






share|improve this answer








New contributor



Donat Holzer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.














  • 1





    Welcome! Carrying extra gear is a great idea. Plus you’re in charge of the snacks...

    – Swifty
    6 hours ago


















5














If you want to play nice, this ride is going to be quite gentle and sociable for you. That means it could be a good fit for a recovery ride. Read up on recovery riding, but you should find it’s recommended to have a nice steady ride where you keep your heart rate down low (like zone 2), and if you get it too elevated, even by a little bit you spoil the whole purpose of the recovery ride.



Naturally you’ll need something to recover from, so the day before you can treat yourself to a jolly good spanking and thrash your legs about a bit. Then when you ride slowly with the group you’ll be actively promoting recovery and end up even stronger! Don’t forget to stop for a nice slice of cake.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2





    +1. I've done just this - led a 70km ride the day after a 200km. It didn't go perfectly to plan and I got some bonus interval training but it certainly achieved the OP's goal

    – Chris H
    6 hours ago


















2














I don't do much road cycling myself, so this might not be the best advice. However, if you lower your saddle hight a couple of inches you will notice it harder to pedal and that should slow you down some. Not enough? Lower saddle a bit more. Just a thought! It's a cheap fix anyway! Best of luck.






share|improve this answer








New contributor



David is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.



















  • That could actually work - riding with the saddle too low is a hassle

    – Swifty
    6 hours ago












  • It worked for me once by accident. I set out on a ride with my seat at full hight got about half a mile into the ride and found it was getting harder and harder to pedal and suddenly couldn't pedal anymore in top gear. I switched down on to the middle cog at the front but it was still a lot tougher than it should be, so I pull over thinking I have a stuck brake or something seized up. The front and rear wheel spun freely no brake binding. I lifted the rear wheel and turned the cranks by hand it all seemed fine then I noticed. The seat post had gradually slid all the way down to the stop.

    – David
    6 hours ago











  • Give it a try, it will cost you nothing but some burnt quads!

    – David
    6 hours ago


















1














When I'm riding with slower riders (who shall remain nameless) I force myself to ride in a gear that matches their pace. Staying in first or second gear is stressful but it keeps people happy. It is also a good light rep workout.

There are ways of adding resistance to your bike but I don't think they can be called "good".



It's interesting that Google does not have many suggestions for increasing drag on a bicycle.



Ways to add resistance (just brainstorming here, a grain of salt might be needed):



  • Tie a rope to a rock and drag it behind your bike. Probably tear up the road/trail and cause a hazard.

  • Reduce tire pressure. Probably won't provide enough drag.

  • Make a sail or parachute for your bike. Parachute might work.

  • Have the slowest rider hold on to your bike and pull them. Could be dangerous.

  • A single bottle generator will slow down the bike, but probably not enough. How many generators do you think you could get on your bike? Two on the fork, and maybe two more on the back? Four might be enough to slow you down.

  • Wear baggy clothes and sit as upright as possible.

  • Adjust your brakes so they always rub. I don't like this one. Can't stand to have my brakes rubbing.

  • Maybe leave the bike at home and run instead. This answer does meet question requirements. Just thinking outside the bike.

  • Buy a resistance trainer, remove the resistance device, and attach the resistance device to your bike. It would be like being on a trainer while riding the bike! (linked as an example, not a recommendation)

I was going to say "pulling a heavy trailer" but once you get it rolling it does not offer much drag. You need something continuous.



That's it, I'm brainstormed out. Hope this sparks some ideas from others!






share|improve this answer






























    1














    If possible, position yourself at the back of the group. You can even lead from there with a small group.



    Staying at the back allows you to encourage those who are struggling or taking it easy, and means you're not always glancing over your shoulder to check whether you've left them behind. As a result going slowly feels much more natural than it does at the front. You can also keep an eye on the group and make sure everyone is OK, and you've got the speed to catch up if the group gets split. When I ride with the slower of my two clubs I often find myself back marking (with the faster club I'm often barely hanging on to the back).



    If you're used to wearing a thin layer of lycra, wear a little more (as you'll be working less hard, but make it more casual - extra wind resistance plus it might fit in better with the rest of the group.



    Riding to/from the group ride can be a chance to really go for it.






    share|improve this answer






























      1














      The best way to slow your ride down without ruining how your bike rides is to focus on rolling resistance. The heaviest duty tyres like a Schwalbe Marathon Plus will take a lot more effort to push at the same speed when compared to faster road tyres. Get the widest ones that you can fit on your bike to make the biggest difference. There are also heavy duty thornproof tubes which will have a similar effect. I've seen one from Tioga which is 600% thicker than a regular butyl tube and also has sealant inside it as well, which will also add a little more resistance and weight.



      Depending on what you wear while riding, you might also be able to add significant aerodynamic drag simply by wearing baggier clothing. The efficiency losses here will be much smaller, but have the advantage of being non-linear (2×faster is 4×more aero drag). When you are going fastest is likely to be when your bike gives you the greatest advantage, so maximising aero drag where possible will help to minimise this.






      share|improve this answer























        Your Answer








        StackExchange.ready(function()
        var channelOptions =
        tags: "".split(" "),
        id: "126"
        ;
        initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

        StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
        // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
        if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
        StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
        createEditor();
        );

        else
        createEditor();

        );

        function createEditor()
        StackExchange.prepareEditor(
        heartbeatType: 'answer',
        autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
        convertImagesToLinks: false,
        noModals: true,
        showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
        reputationToPostImages: null,
        bindNavPrevention: true,
        postfix: "",
        imageUploader:
        brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
        contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
        allowUrls: true
        ,
        noCode: true, onDemand: true,
        discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
        ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
        );



        );






        angelatlarge is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









        draft saved

        draft discarded


















        StackExchange.ready(
        function ()
        StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fbicycles.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f61831%2fhow-to-slow-yourself-down-for-playing-nice-with-others%23new-answer', 'question_page');

        );

        Post as a guest















        Required, but never shown

























        6 Answers
        6






        active

        oldest

        votes








        6 Answers
        6






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        6














        • Focussing on the "training harder" aspect of your question:

        A simple way for training hard while keeping your speed comparatively low would be to increase your cadence.



        The easiest approach: Try switching a gear or two lower than you normally feel comfortable with, meaning you will have to pedal faster to keep the same speed.



        One of the advantages of high candence cycling is less force on your legs, and therefore accumulated fatigue, leading to a faster recovery after a long ride.



        There is actually a nice GCN youtube video on this topic: GCN: Improve Your High Cadence Cycling.



        • Focussing on the "playing nice" aspect of your question:

        You could offer to carry a bigger share of supplies and equipment. Collect those spare tubes, an emergency pump, patches, and maybe an extra water bottle, and the additional weight will make it certainly more challenging for you (and easier for your companions), especially if your tour includes some nice climbs.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor



        Donat Holzer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.














        • 1





          Welcome! Carrying extra gear is a great idea. Plus you’re in charge of the snacks...

          – Swifty
          6 hours ago















        6














        • Focussing on the "training harder" aspect of your question:

        A simple way for training hard while keeping your speed comparatively low would be to increase your cadence.



        The easiest approach: Try switching a gear or two lower than you normally feel comfortable with, meaning you will have to pedal faster to keep the same speed.



        One of the advantages of high candence cycling is less force on your legs, and therefore accumulated fatigue, leading to a faster recovery after a long ride.



        There is actually a nice GCN youtube video on this topic: GCN: Improve Your High Cadence Cycling.



        • Focussing on the "playing nice" aspect of your question:

        You could offer to carry a bigger share of supplies and equipment. Collect those spare tubes, an emergency pump, patches, and maybe an extra water bottle, and the additional weight will make it certainly more challenging for you (and easier for your companions), especially if your tour includes some nice climbs.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor



        Donat Holzer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.














        • 1





          Welcome! Carrying extra gear is a great idea. Plus you’re in charge of the snacks...

          – Swifty
          6 hours ago













        6












        6








        6







        • Focussing on the "training harder" aspect of your question:

        A simple way for training hard while keeping your speed comparatively low would be to increase your cadence.



        The easiest approach: Try switching a gear or two lower than you normally feel comfortable with, meaning you will have to pedal faster to keep the same speed.



        One of the advantages of high candence cycling is less force on your legs, and therefore accumulated fatigue, leading to a faster recovery after a long ride.



        There is actually a nice GCN youtube video on this topic: GCN: Improve Your High Cadence Cycling.



        • Focussing on the "playing nice" aspect of your question:

        You could offer to carry a bigger share of supplies and equipment. Collect those spare tubes, an emergency pump, patches, and maybe an extra water bottle, and the additional weight will make it certainly more challenging for you (and easier for your companions), especially if your tour includes some nice climbs.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor



        Donat Holzer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        • Focussing on the "training harder" aspect of your question:

        A simple way for training hard while keeping your speed comparatively low would be to increase your cadence.



        The easiest approach: Try switching a gear or two lower than you normally feel comfortable with, meaning you will have to pedal faster to keep the same speed.



        One of the advantages of high candence cycling is less force on your legs, and therefore accumulated fatigue, leading to a faster recovery after a long ride.



        There is actually a nice GCN youtube video on this topic: GCN: Improve Your High Cadence Cycling.



        • Focussing on the "playing nice" aspect of your question:

        You could offer to carry a bigger share of supplies and equipment. Collect those spare tubes, an emergency pump, patches, and maybe an extra water bottle, and the additional weight will make it certainly more challenging for you (and easier for your companions), especially if your tour includes some nice climbs.







        share|improve this answer








        New contributor



        Donat Holzer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.








        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer






        New contributor



        Donat Holzer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.








        answered 7 hours ago









        Donat HolzerDonat Holzer

        612




        612




        New contributor



        Donat Holzer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.




        New contributor




        Donat Holzer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        • 1





          Welcome! Carrying extra gear is a great idea. Plus you’re in charge of the snacks...

          – Swifty
          6 hours ago












        • 1





          Welcome! Carrying extra gear is a great idea. Plus you’re in charge of the snacks...

          – Swifty
          6 hours ago







        1




        1





        Welcome! Carrying extra gear is a great idea. Plus you’re in charge of the snacks...

        – Swifty
        6 hours ago





        Welcome! Carrying extra gear is a great idea. Plus you’re in charge of the snacks...

        – Swifty
        6 hours ago











        5














        If you want to play nice, this ride is going to be quite gentle and sociable for you. That means it could be a good fit for a recovery ride. Read up on recovery riding, but you should find it’s recommended to have a nice steady ride where you keep your heart rate down low (like zone 2), and if you get it too elevated, even by a little bit you spoil the whole purpose of the recovery ride.



        Naturally you’ll need something to recover from, so the day before you can treat yourself to a jolly good spanking and thrash your legs about a bit. Then when you ride slowly with the group you’ll be actively promoting recovery and end up even stronger! Don’t forget to stop for a nice slice of cake.






        share|improve this answer


















        • 2





          +1. I've done just this - led a 70km ride the day after a 200km. It didn't go perfectly to plan and I got some bonus interval training but it certainly achieved the OP's goal

          – Chris H
          6 hours ago















        5














        If you want to play nice, this ride is going to be quite gentle and sociable for you. That means it could be a good fit for a recovery ride. Read up on recovery riding, but you should find it’s recommended to have a nice steady ride where you keep your heart rate down low (like zone 2), and if you get it too elevated, even by a little bit you spoil the whole purpose of the recovery ride.



        Naturally you’ll need something to recover from, so the day before you can treat yourself to a jolly good spanking and thrash your legs about a bit. Then when you ride slowly with the group you’ll be actively promoting recovery and end up even stronger! Don’t forget to stop for a nice slice of cake.






        share|improve this answer


















        • 2





          +1. I've done just this - led a 70km ride the day after a 200km. It didn't go perfectly to plan and I got some bonus interval training but it certainly achieved the OP's goal

          – Chris H
          6 hours ago













        5












        5








        5







        If you want to play nice, this ride is going to be quite gentle and sociable for you. That means it could be a good fit for a recovery ride. Read up on recovery riding, but you should find it’s recommended to have a nice steady ride where you keep your heart rate down low (like zone 2), and if you get it too elevated, even by a little bit you spoil the whole purpose of the recovery ride.



        Naturally you’ll need something to recover from, so the day before you can treat yourself to a jolly good spanking and thrash your legs about a bit. Then when you ride slowly with the group you’ll be actively promoting recovery and end up even stronger! Don’t forget to stop for a nice slice of cake.






        share|improve this answer













        If you want to play nice, this ride is going to be quite gentle and sociable for you. That means it could be a good fit for a recovery ride. Read up on recovery riding, but you should find it’s recommended to have a nice steady ride where you keep your heart rate down low (like zone 2), and if you get it too elevated, even by a little bit you spoil the whole purpose of the recovery ride.



        Naturally you’ll need something to recover from, so the day before you can treat yourself to a jolly good spanking and thrash your legs about a bit. Then when you ride slowly with the group you’ll be actively promoting recovery and end up even stronger! Don’t forget to stop for a nice slice of cake.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 6 hours ago









        SwiftySwifty

        3,5051830




        3,5051830







        • 2





          +1. I've done just this - led a 70km ride the day after a 200km. It didn't go perfectly to plan and I got some bonus interval training but it certainly achieved the OP's goal

          – Chris H
          6 hours ago












        • 2





          +1. I've done just this - led a 70km ride the day after a 200km. It didn't go perfectly to plan and I got some bonus interval training but it certainly achieved the OP's goal

          – Chris H
          6 hours ago







        2




        2





        +1. I've done just this - led a 70km ride the day after a 200km. It didn't go perfectly to plan and I got some bonus interval training but it certainly achieved the OP's goal

        – Chris H
        6 hours ago





        +1. I've done just this - led a 70km ride the day after a 200km. It didn't go perfectly to plan and I got some bonus interval training but it certainly achieved the OP's goal

        – Chris H
        6 hours ago











        2














        I don't do much road cycling myself, so this might not be the best advice. However, if you lower your saddle hight a couple of inches you will notice it harder to pedal and that should slow you down some. Not enough? Lower saddle a bit more. Just a thought! It's a cheap fix anyway! Best of luck.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor



        David is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.



















        • That could actually work - riding with the saddle too low is a hassle

          – Swifty
          6 hours ago












        • It worked for me once by accident. I set out on a ride with my seat at full hight got about half a mile into the ride and found it was getting harder and harder to pedal and suddenly couldn't pedal anymore in top gear. I switched down on to the middle cog at the front but it was still a lot tougher than it should be, so I pull over thinking I have a stuck brake or something seized up. The front and rear wheel spun freely no brake binding. I lifted the rear wheel and turned the cranks by hand it all seemed fine then I noticed. The seat post had gradually slid all the way down to the stop.

          – David
          6 hours ago











        • Give it a try, it will cost you nothing but some burnt quads!

          – David
          6 hours ago















        2














        I don't do much road cycling myself, so this might not be the best advice. However, if you lower your saddle hight a couple of inches you will notice it harder to pedal and that should slow you down some. Not enough? Lower saddle a bit more. Just a thought! It's a cheap fix anyway! Best of luck.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor



        David is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.



















        • That could actually work - riding with the saddle too low is a hassle

          – Swifty
          6 hours ago












        • It worked for me once by accident. I set out on a ride with my seat at full hight got about half a mile into the ride and found it was getting harder and harder to pedal and suddenly couldn't pedal anymore in top gear. I switched down on to the middle cog at the front but it was still a lot tougher than it should be, so I pull over thinking I have a stuck brake or something seized up. The front and rear wheel spun freely no brake binding. I lifted the rear wheel and turned the cranks by hand it all seemed fine then I noticed. The seat post had gradually slid all the way down to the stop.

          – David
          6 hours ago











        • Give it a try, it will cost you nothing but some burnt quads!

          – David
          6 hours ago













        2












        2








        2







        I don't do much road cycling myself, so this might not be the best advice. However, if you lower your saddle hight a couple of inches you will notice it harder to pedal and that should slow you down some. Not enough? Lower saddle a bit more. Just a thought! It's a cheap fix anyway! Best of luck.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor



        David is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        I don't do much road cycling myself, so this might not be the best advice. However, if you lower your saddle hight a couple of inches you will notice it harder to pedal and that should slow you down some. Not enough? Lower saddle a bit more. Just a thought! It's a cheap fix anyway! Best of luck.







        share|improve this answer








        New contributor



        David is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.








        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer






        New contributor



        David is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.








        answered 6 hours ago









        DavidDavid

        1445




        1445




        New contributor



        David is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.




        New contributor




        David is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.














        • That could actually work - riding with the saddle too low is a hassle

          – Swifty
          6 hours ago












        • It worked for me once by accident. I set out on a ride with my seat at full hight got about half a mile into the ride and found it was getting harder and harder to pedal and suddenly couldn't pedal anymore in top gear. I switched down on to the middle cog at the front but it was still a lot tougher than it should be, so I pull over thinking I have a stuck brake or something seized up. The front and rear wheel spun freely no brake binding. I lifted the rear wheel and turned the cranks by hand it all seemed fine then I noticed. The seat post had gradually slid all the way down to the stop.

          – David
          6 hours ago











        • Give it a try, it will cost you nothing but some burnt quads!

          – David
          6 hours ago

















        • That could actually work - riding with the saddle too low is a hassle

          – Swifty
          6 hours ago












        • It worked for me once by accident. I set out on a ride with my seat at full hight got about half a mile into the ride and found it was getting harder and harder to pedal and suddenly couldn't pedal anymore in top gear. I switched down on to the middle cog at the front but it was still a lot tougher than it should be, so I pull over thinking I have a stuck brake or something seized up. The front and rear wheel spun freely no brake binding. I lifted the rear wheel and turned the cranks by hand it all seemed fine then I noticed. The seat post had gradually slid all the way down to the stop.

          – David
          6 hours ago











        • Give it a try, it will cost you nothing but some burnt quads!

          – David
          6 hours ago
















        That could actually work - riding with the saddle too low is a hassle

        – Swifty
        6 hours ago






        That could actually work - riding with the saddle too low is a hassle

        – Swifty
        6 hours ago














        It worked for me once by accident. I set out on a ride with my seat at full hight got about half a mile into the ride and found it was getting harder and harder to pedal and suddenly couldn't pedal anymore in top gear. I switched down on to the middle cog at the front but it was still a lot tougher than it should be, so I pull over thinking I have a stuck brake or something seized up. The front and rear wheel spun freely no brake binding. I lifted the rear wheel and turned the cranks by hand it all seemed fine then I noticed. The seat post had gradually slid all the way down to the stop.

        – David
        6 hours ago





        It worked for me once by accident. I set out on a ride with my seat at full hight got about half a mile into the ride and found it was getting harder and harder to pedal and suddenly couldn't pedal anymore in top gear. I switched down on to the middle cog at the front but it was still a lot tougher than it should be, so I pull over thinking I have a stuck brake or something seized up. The front and rear wheel spun freely no brake binding. I lifted the rear wheel and turned the cranks by hand it all seemed fine then I noticed. The seat post had gradually slid all the way down to the stop.

        – David
        6 hours ago













        Give it a try, it will cost you nothing but some burnt quads!

        – David
        6 hours ago





        Give it a try, it will cost you nothing but some burnt quads!

        – David
        6 hours ago











        1














        When I'm riding with slower riders (who shall remain nameless) I force myself to ride in a gear that matches their pace. Staying in first or second gear is stressful but it keeps people happy. It is also a good light rep workout.

        There are ways of adding resistance to your bike but I don't think they can be called "good".



        It's interesting that Google does not have many suggestions for increasing drag on a bicycle.



        Ways to add resistance (just brainstorming here, a grain of salt might be needed):



        • Tie a rope to a rock and drag it behind your bike. Probably tear up the road/trail and cause a hazard.

        • Reduce tire pressure. Probably won't provide enough drag.

        • Make a sail or parachute for your bike. Parachute might work.

        • Have the slowest rider hold on to your bike and pull them. Could be dangerous.

        • A single bottle generator will slow down the bike, but probably not enough. How many generators do you think you could get on your bike? Two on the fork, and maybe two more on the back? Four might be enough to slow you down.

        • Wear baggy clothes and sit as upright as possible.

        • Adjust your brakes so they always rub. I don't like this one. Can't stand to have my brakes rubbing.

        • Maybe leave the bike at home and run instead. This answer does meet question requirements. Just thinking outside the bike.

        • Buy a resistance trainer, remove the resistance device, and attach the resistance device to your bike. It would be like being on a trainer while riding the bike! (linked as an example, not a recommendation)

        I was going to say "pulling a heavy trailer" but once you get it rolling it does not offer much drag. You need something continuous.



        That's it, I'm brainstormed out. Hope this sparks some ideas from others!






        share|improve this answer



























          1














          When I'm riding with slower riders (who shall remain nameless) I force myself to ride in a gear that matches their pace. Staying in first or second gear is stressful but it keeps people happy. It is also a good light rep workout.

          There are ways of adding resistance to your bike but I don't think they can be called "good".



          It's interesting that Google does not have many suggestions for increasing drag on a bicycle.



          Ways to add resistance (just brainstorming here, a grain of salt might be needed):



          • Tie a rope to a rock and drag it behind your bike. Probably tear up the road/trail and cause a hazard.

          • Reduce tire pressure. Probably won't provide enough drag.

          • Make a sail or parachute for your bike. Parachute might work.

          • Have the slowest rider hold on to your bike and pull them. Could be dangerous.

          • A single bottle generator will slow down the bike, but probably not enough. How many generators do you think you could get on your bike? Two on the fork, and maybe two more on the back? Four might be enough to slow you down.

          • Wear baggy clothes and sit as upright as possible.

          • Adjust your brakes so they always rub. I don't like this one. Can't stand to have my brakes rubbing.

          • Maybe leave the bike at home and run instead. This answer does meet question requirements. Just thinking outside the bike.

          • Buy a resistance trainer, remove the resistance device, and attach the resistance device to your bike. It would be like being on a trainer while riding the bike! (linked as an example, not a recommendation)

          I was going to say "pulling a heavy trailer" but once you get it rolling it does not offer much drag. You need something continuous.



          That's it, I'm brainstormed out. Hope this sparks some ideas from others!






          share|improve this answer

























            1












            1








            1







            When I'm riding with slower riders (who shall remain nameless) I force myself to ride in a gear that matches their pace. Staying in first or second gear is stressful but it keeps people happy. It is also a good light rep workout.

            There are ways of adding resistance to your bike but I don't think they can be called "good".



            It's interesting that Google does not have many suggestions for increasing drag on a bicycle.



            Ways to add resistance (just brainstorming here, a grain of salt might be needed):



            • Tie a rope to a rock and drag it behind your bike. Probably tear up the road/trail and cause a hazard.

            • Reduce tire pressure. Probably won't provide enough drag.

            • Make a sail or parachute for your bike. Parachute might work.

            • Have the slowest rider hold on to your bike and pull them. Could be dangerous.

            • A single bottle generator will slow down the bike, but probably not enough. How many generators do you think you could get on your bike? Two on the fork, and maybe two more on the back? Four might be enough to slow you down.

            • Wear baggy clothes and sit as upright as possible.

            • Adjust your brakes so they always rub. I don't like this one. Can't stand to have my brakes rubbing.

            • Maybe leave the bike at home and run instead. This answer does meet question requirements. Just thinking outside the bike.

            • Buy a resistance trainer, remove the resistance device, and attach the resistance device to your bike. It would be like being on a trainer while riding the bike! (linked as an example, not a recommendation)

            I was going to say "pulling a heavy trailer" but once you get it rolling it does not offer much drag. You need something continuous.



            That's it, I'm brainstormed out. Hope this sparks some ideas from others!






            share|improve this answer













            When I'm riding with slower riders (who shall remain nameless) I force myself to ride in a gear that matches their pace. Staying in first or second gear is stressful but it keeps people happy. It is also a good light rep workout.

            There are ways of adding resistance to your bike but I don't think they can be called "good".



            It's interesting that Google does not have many suggestions for increasing drag on a bicycle.



            Ways to add resistance (just brainstorming here, a grain of salt might be needed):



            • Tie a rope to a rock and drag it behind your bike. Probably tear up the road/trail and cause a hazard.

            • Reduce tire pressure. Probably won't provide enough drag.

            • Make a sail or parachute for your bike. Parachute might work.

            • Have the slowest rider hold on to your bike and pull them. Could be dangerous.

            • A single bottle generator will slow down the bike, but probably not enough. How many generators do you think you could get on your bike? Two on the fork, and maybe two more on the back? Four might be enough to slow you down.

            • Wear baggy clothes and sit as upright as possible.

            • Adjust your brakes so they always rub. I don't like this one. Can't stand to have my brakes rubbing.

            • Maybe leave the bike at home and run instead. This answer does meet question requirements. Just thinking outside the bike.

            • Buy a resistance trainer, remove the resistance device, and attach the resistance device to your bike. It would be like being on a trainer while riding the bike! (linked as an example, not a recommendation)

            I was going to say "pulling a heavy trailer" but once you get it rolling it does not offer much drag. You need something continuous.



            That's it, I'm brainstormed out. Hope this sparks some ideas from others!







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 7 hours ago









            David DDavid D

            1,23616




            1,23616





















                1














                If possible, position yourself at the back of the group. You can even lead from there with a small group.



                Staying at the back allows you to encourage those who are struggling or taking it easy, and means you're not always glancing over your shoulder to check whether you've left them behind. As a result going slowly feels much more natural than it does at the front. You can also keep an eye on the group and make sure everyone is OK, and you've got the speed to catch up if the group gets split. When I ride with the slower of my two clubs I often find myself back marking (with the faster club I'm often barely hanging on to the back).



                If you're used to wearing a thin layer of lycra, wear a little more (as you'll be working less hard, but make it more casual - extra wind resistance plus it might fit in better with the rest of the group.



                Riding to/from the group ride can be a chance to really go for it.






                share|improve this answer



























                  1














                  If possible, position yourself at the back of the group. You can even lead from there with a small group.



                  Staying at the back allows you to encourage those who are struggling or taking it easy, and means you're not always glancing over your shoulder to check whether you've left them behind. As a result going slowly feels much more natural than it does at the front. You can also keep an eye on the group and make sure everyone is OK, and you've got the speed to catch up if the group gets split. When I ride with the slower of my two clubs I often find myself back marking (with the faster club I'm often barely hanging on to the back).



                  If you're used to wearing a thin layer of lycra, wear a little more (as you'll be working less hard, but make it more casual - extra wind resistance plus it might fit in better with the rest of the group.



                  Riding to/from the group ride can be a chance to really go for it.






                  share|improve this answer

























                    1












                    1








                    1







                    If possible, position yourself at the back of the group. You can even lead from there with a small group.



                    Staying at the back allows you to encourage those who are struggling or taking it easy, and means you're not always glancing over your shoulder to check whether you've left them behind. As a result going slowly feels much more natural than it does at the front. You can also keep an eye on the group and make sure everyone is OK, and you've got the speed to catch up if the group gets split. When I ride with the slower of my two clubs I often find myself back marking (with the faster club I'm often barely hanging on to the back).



                    If you're used to wearing a thin layer of lycra, wear a little more (as you'll be working less hard, but make it more casual - extra wind resistance plus it might fit in better with the rest of the group.



                    Riding to/from the group ride can be a chance to really go for it.






                    share|improve this answer













                    If possible, position yourself at the back of the group. You can even lead from there with a small group.



                    Staying at the back allows you to encourage those who are struggling or taking it easy, and means you're not always glancing over your shoulder to check whether you've left them behind. As a result going slowly feels much more natural than it does at the front. You can also keep an eye on the group and make sure everyone is OK, and you've got the speed to catch up if the group gets split. When I ride with the slower of my two clubs I often find myself back marking (with the faster club I'm often barely hanging on to the back).



                    If you're used to wearing a thin layer of lycra, wear a little more (as you'll be working less hard, but make it more casual - extra wind resistance plus it might fit in better with the rest of the group.



                    Riding to/from the group ride can be a chance to really go for it.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 6 hours ago









                    Chris HChris H

                    24.9k139110




                    24.9k139110





















                        1














                        The best way to slow your ride down without ruining how your bike rides is to focus on rolling resistance. The heaviest duty tyres like a Schwalbe Marathon Plus will take a lot more effort to push at the same speed when compared to faster road tyres. Get the widest ones that you can fit on your bike to make the biggest difference. There are also heavy duty thornproof tubes which will have a similar effect. I've seen one from Tioga which is 600% thicker than a regular butyl tube and also has sealant inside it as well, which will also add a little more resistance and weight.



                        Depending on what you wear while riding, you might also be able to add significant aerodynamic drag simply by wearing baggier clothing. The efficiency losses here will be much smaller, but have the advantage of being non-linear (2×faster is 4×more aero drag). When you are going fastest is likely to be when your bike gives you the greatest advantage, so maximising aero drag where possible will help to minimise this.






                        share|improve this answer



























                          1














                          The best way to slow your ride down without ruining how your bike rides is to focus on rolling resistance. The heaviest duty tyres like a Schwalbe Marathon Plus will take a lot more effort to push at the same speed when compared to faster road tyres. Get the widest ones that you can fit on your bike to make the biggest difference. There are also heavy duty thornproof tubes which will have a similar effect. I've seen one from Tioga which is 600% thicker than a regular butyl tube and also has sealant inside it as well, which will also add a little more resistance and weight.



                          Depending on what you wear while riding, you might also be able to add significant aerodynamic drag simply by wearing baggier clothing. The efficiency losses here will be much smaller, but have the advantage of being non-linear (2×faster is 4×more aero drag). When you are going fastest is likely to be when your bike gives you the greatest advantage, so maximising aero drag where possible will help to minimise this.






                          share|improve this answer

























                            1












                            1








                            1







                            The best way to slow your ride down without ruining how your bike rides is to focus on rolling resistance. The heaviest duty tyres like a Schwalbe Marathon Plus will take a lot more effort to push at the same speed when compared to faster road tyres. Get the widest ones that you can fit on your bike to make the biggest difference. There are also heavy duty thornproof tubes which will have a similar effect. I've seen one from Tioga which is 600% thicker than a regular butyl tube and also has sealant inside it as well, which will also add a little more resistance and weight.



                            Depending on what you wear while riding, you might also be able to add significant aerodynamic drag simply by wearing baggier clothing. The efficiency losses here will be much smaller, but have the advantage of being non-linear (2×faster is 4×more aero drag). When you are going fastest is likely to be when your bike gives you the greatest advantage, so maximising aero drag where possible will help to minimise this.






                            share|improve this answer













                            The best way to slow your ride down without ruining how your bike rides is to focus on rolling resistance. The heaviest duty tyres like a Schwalbe Marathon Plus will take a lot more effort to push at the same speed when compared to faster road tyres. Get the widest ones that you can fit on your bike to make the biggest difference. There are also heavy duty thornproof tubes which will have a similar effect. I've seen one from Tioga which is 600% thicker than a regular butyl tube and also has sealant inside it as well, which will also add a little more resistance and weight.



                            Depending on what you wear while riding, you might also be able to add significant aerodynamic drag simply by wearing baggier clothing. The efficiency losses here will be much smaller, but have the advantage of being non-linear (2×faster is 4×more aero drag). When you are going fastest is likely to be when your bike gives you the greatest advantage, so maximising aero drag where possible will help to minimise this.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 2 hours ago









                            Carbon side upCarbon side up

                            3,202317




                            3,202317




















                                angelatlarge is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









                                draft saved

                                draft discarded


















                                angelatlarge is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












                                angelatlarge is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











                                angelatlarge is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














                                Thanks for contributing an answer to Bicycles Stack Exchange!


                                • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                But avoid


                                • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                                To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                                draft saved


                                draft discarded














                                StackExchange.ready(
                                function ()
                                StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fbicycles.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f61831%2fhow-to-slow-yourself-down-for-playing-nice-with-others%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                                );

                                Post as a guest















                                Required, but never shown





















































                                Required, but never shown














                                Required, but never shown












                                Required, but never shown







                                Required, but never shown

































                                Required, but never shown














                                Required, but never shown












                                Required, but never shown







                                Required, but never shown







                                Popular posts from this blog

                                Log på Navigationsmenu

                                Wonderful Copenhagen (sang) Eksterne henvisninger | NavigationsmenurSide på frankloesser.comWonderful Copenhagen

                                Detroit Tigers Spis treści Historia | Skład zespołu | Sukcesy | Członkowie Baseball Hall of Fame | Zastrzeżone numery | Przypisy | Menu nawigacyjneEncyclopedia of Detroit - Detroit TigersTigers Stadium, Detroit, MITigers Timeline 1900sDetroit Tigers Team History & EncyclopediaTigers Timeline 1910s1935 World Series1945 World Series1945 World Series1984 World SeriesComerica Park, Detroit, MI2006 World Series2012 World SeriesDetroit Tigers 40-Man RosterDetroit Tigers Coaching StaffTigers Hall of FamersTigers Retired Numberse