CP vs FTP

mclarent
mclarent Posts: 784
Hi all - just a quick one really, is CP as near as dammit FTP? Just bought a flow and want to know (innit bro). :shock: Sorry. :wink:
"And the Lord said unto Cain, 'where is Abel thy brother?' And he said, 'I know not: I dropped him on the climb up to the motorway bridge'."
- eccolafilosofiadelpedale

Comments

  • jibberjim
    jibberjim Posts: 2,810
    Yes.
    Jibbering Sports Stuff: http://jibbering.com/sports/
  • nmcgann
    nmcgann Posts: 1,780
    CP60 - i.e. the best power you can do for 60mins would be the same as FTP.

    CP20 (20mins) isn't - most people can do quite a bit more than FTP for 20 mins. (+5% or higher usually)
    --
    "Because the cycling is pain. The cycling is soul crushing pain."
  • Alex_Simmons/RST
    Alex_Simmons/RST Posts: 4,161
    nmcgann wrote:
    CP60 - i.e. the best power you can do for 60mins would be the same as FTP.

    CP20 (20mins) isn't - most people can do quite a bit more than FTP for 20 mins. (+5% or higher usually)
    There is only one Critical Power.
  • Alex_Simmons/RST
    Alex_Simmons/RST Posts: 4,161
    The Critical Power (CP) paradigm describes the work-time relationship, where the work performed during a maximal bout of exercise is dependent on the duration of effort and the individual’s current aerobic and anaerobic capabilities. i.e. a higher work rate (power) is possible over shorter durations and vice versa.

    The work-time relationship is readily expressed as a linear equation:

    Workmax = AWC + (CP x t)

    Workmax is the total work performed (in joules)
    AWC is the anaerobic work capacity (y axis intercept – joules)
    CP is the Critical Power (slope of the line – watts)
    t is time (x axis – seconds)

    In this sense CP is the maximal power output sustainable over a long time without fatiguing. In practical terms CP corresponds closely to FTP.

    It is possible (indeed useful) to use this relationship to establish both a rider’s CP and AWC and can be readily done via measuring the average power of two or more maximal exercise bouts over different durations between 3 and 30 minutes.

    The CP paradigm can also be used to pre-determine/estimate a rider’s maximal power output over various untested durations, as well as establish changes in both AWC and CP resulting from training.
  • chrisw12
    chrisw12 Posts: 1,246
    :? :? :? :? :?

    How is work done vs time LINEAR?

    Surely it's a decay curve flattening out as time increases or am I getting confused with a power vs time curve? Or are they the same thing?
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Posts: 79,667
    I thought critical power was the phrase used by Joe Friel to describe your best power output for a particular length of time...

    i.e. CP60=power for 60 minutes
    CP6 is power for 6 mins...
  • doyler78
    doyler78 Posts: 1,951
    NapoleonD wrote:
    I thought critical power was the phrase used by Joe Friel to describe your best power output for a particular length of time...

    i.e. CP60=power for 60 minutes
    CP6 is power for 6 mins...

    It is however Friel misappropiated the term which had already existed for many years. Monod & Scherer (sp?) came up with this name first and it is their model that Alex refers to. Whilst is is unfortunate that Friel used the term it nevertheless now probably has more people who understand his interpretation than do the originators.
  • doyler78
    doyler78 Posts: 1,951
    chrisw12 wrote:
    :? :? :? :? :?

    How is work done vs time LINEAR?

    Surely it's a decay curve flattening out as time increases or am I getting confused with a power vs time curve? Or are they the same thing?

    Here is a calculator. You should be able to follow the fomulas as it's an excel spreadsheet.

    http://velo-fit.com/new/tools.php
  • Alex_Simmons/RST
    Alex_Simmons/RST Posts: 4,161
    doyler78 wrote:
    NapoleonD wrote:
    I thought critical power was the phrase used by Joe Friel to describe your best power output for a particular length of time...

    i.e. CP60=power for 60 minutes
    CP6 is power for 6 mins...

    It is however Friel misappropiated the term which had already existed for many years. Monod & Scherer (sp?) came up with this name first and it is their model that Alex refers to. Whilst is is unfortunate that Friel used the term it nevertheless now probably has more people who understand his interpretation than do the originators.
    Correct. CP has a precise meaning in exercise physiology and has existed for a good 50 or more years.

    Friel took the term and made something else up that was semi related, confusing matters somewhat.

    Mean Maximal Power for a given duration would have been better.
  • Alex_Simmons/RST
    Alex_Simmons/RST Posts: 4,161
    chrisw12 wrote:
    :? :? :? :? :?

    How is work done vs time LINEAR?

    Surely it's a decay curve flattening out as time increases or am I getting confused with a power vs time curve? Or are they the same thing?
    It's the work-time relationship, not power-time.

    It is, for durations between a few minutes and about an hour, remarkably linear. And it is for that reason, one of the better methods of estimating Functional Threshold Power (provided you test correctly).

    Refer Sin #5 here:
    http://alex-cycle.blogspot.com/2008/05/ ... -sins.html

    and Sin of Sins #8 here for what to avoid doing when testing for and calculating CP:
    http://alex-cycle.blogspot.com/2009/07/ ... ftp-2.html
  • Alex_Simmons/RST
    Alex_Simmons/RST Posts: 4,161
    mclarent wrote:
    Hi all - just a quick one really, is CP as near as dammit FTP? Just bought a flow and want to know (innit bro). :shock: Sorry. :wink:
    Ap[art from testing properly and using the data appropriately, it also very much depends on the accuracy of your Flow. If it isn't accurate or has a non-linear slope in reported power (compared to actual), then the CP model (or any testing) will succumb to GIGO and report an incorrect CP and AWC.
  • Bronzie
    Bronzie Posts: 4,927
    the CP model will succumb to GIGO
    an acronym too far - what is GIGO?
  • Bronzie
    Bronzie Posts: 4,927
    still taking the pith I see :wink:
  • mclarent
    mclarent Posts: 784
    mclarent wrote:
    Hi all - just a quick one really, is CP as near as dammit FTP? Just bought a flow and want to know (innit bro). :shock: Sorry. :wink:
    Ap[art from testing properly and using the data appropriately, it also very much depends on the accuracy of your Flow. If it isn't accurate or has a non-linear slope in reported power (compared to actual), then the CP model (or any testing) will succumb to GIGO and report an incorrect CP and AWC.

    Thanks Alex, and everyone else. One followup if I may? I'm assuming the flow will be incorrect in absolute terms, as it's a bit old,
    but was assuming that as long as it was calibrated and applied consistently that this didn't really matter. However a non-linear slope in reported power sounds pretty terminal. Is there any way of ascertaining this short of checking vs a powertap or similar? I can't get the data out currently as i only have the basic headunit. Or how about if I can find someone with the appropriate headunit?
    "And the Lord said unto Cain, 'where is Abel thy brother?' And he said, 'I know not: I dropped him on the climb up to the motorway bridge'."
    - eccolafilosofiadelpedale