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Running With Power

For the last six months, I have been trying out a new gadget for running. It’s called Stryd and it’s a power meter for runners. Cyclists have been using power meters for decades to optimize their training and racing, so I was intrigued by the prospect of applying the same advantage to running.

Why Power?

Whether training or racing, running is all about throttling your intensity: too intense and you will burn out too early; not intense enough and you won’t achieve maximum results. There are a few possible metrics to help you throttle your intensity already:

Enter power. If you can measure power, you have an exact metric that provides real-time, instantaneous feedback on intensity. Measuring power on the relatively simple mechanical device of a bicycle has been easy, but running humans are much more mechanically complex and measuring power on them was elusive – until now.

A brief explanation of running with power by Dr. Andy Coggan, the OG of power training:

There are now at least two running power meters on the market; I backed one of them, Stryd, on Kickstarter because I liked their approach. It is a wearable 3D accelerometer that, with knowledge of the runner’s mass, calculates work done per unit time (power) in each dimension. It also includes a barometric altimeter so it knows with precision how elevation is changing throughout a run.

The potential benefits of such a device are significant: training smarter with precise intensity, “normalizing” hills during runs, optimizing running form for efficiency, and running perfectly-paced races. How well does it deliver? Following are my conclusions from six months of use:

The Good

The Bad

The Ugly

The Amazeballs

A couple of week ago, I even had the honor of being Stryd’s facebook group featured user. This meant that I posted every day about different ways that I used Stryd to run with power. I’ll replicate some of those posts here on this blog in the coming days.

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