On 26/05/2013 09:19, Charles Carroll wrote:
> Dear Carl,
>
> You offer your usual admirably well-reasoned arguments full of
> serviceable insights. I am always grateful for your posts. Over the
> years I have learned a lot from them. Indeed they are one of my
> principle sources about rowing and sculling. Much of the little I know
> about the sport comes from you. As you know, I quote from your posts all
> the time.
>
> That said, I want to demur on two things in your post.
>
> First, I purposely did not say anything about static ergs in my original
> post. I actually don’t see how static ergs play any part in this
> discussion, aside from needlessly complicating it.
Please remember, Charles, that while you & I will understand the text,
subtext & context, there are many visitors, casual & otherwise, who
haven't a clue what a dynamic erg is or what the difference between ergs
might be. So I try always to include their interests in my responses -
even if that does somewhat complicate my answers :(
>
> And second, I tried as hard as I could in my original post to keep a
> disinterested tone. I have a question that I am thinking about and I am
> doing my best to understand it, and I was hoping that the rsr brain
> trust might shed some light into the dark cave of my ignorance. The one
> thing I hoped to avoid is an argument over which erg is the best.
Well, there's no argument there. There's a brutal torture device
designed to prove who's hardest, & another machine which rewards you for
rowing well. ;)
Let me now take you back, & at some length, to a discussion a quite a
few months back, if I may?
There's nothing useful, nor implicitly correct, about maintaining the
same apparent back position through any part of the stroke. What
determines the back alignment is not the back muscles - it is how you
subconsciously change the angle between pelvis & femur as the legs are
driven down. Think about that: as your knees go down the femur goes
from some 70 deg to the horizontal to around flat & only the miscles
acting around the hip axis - which have no connection with or
understanding of what's horizontal - will determine how the back's
apparent alignment with some totally irrelevant horizon will vary.
When we talk about back posture (or shin alignment) WRT the horizon, we
make a completely inappropriate assumption - that the back is somehow
connected to the seat or slide-bed & that we lever it back, or not, with
muscles which somehow connect with something connected with the
horizontal plane. That'd be quite wrong!
As the legs go down the angle between back & femur changes continuously
(unless we do a monstrous bum-shove!). There is no extra or extraneous
effort required to open that entirely fictional back angle by a few
degrees, or not to open it. As I've said before, that supposed "opening
of the back" is yet another of those many things in rowing that we think
we see, that folk discuss endlessly, but which are simple misconceptions.
I know that's awfully hard stuff to smuggle past the barbed-wire topped,
steel-reinforced concrete wall of preconceptions, but it's necessary to
do so if we are to fully understand the mechanics & dynamics of the
rowing stroke.
> I have been sculling on water for almost a decade. I am acutely aware
> that I know of no erg that perfectly simulates sculling on water. But
> when an erg is in the process of being designed, should the two above
> question be taken into consideration?
I think that RP does a very good job of simulating the rowing stroke, &
that a technical difference between a particular sculler & some
supposedly authoritative textbook does not change that.
>
> Re the example of travelling in a launch next to a smooth sculler. As
> you say, looking just at the seat through this fixed velocity reference
> frame the seat appears not to be moving. But this example could hardly
> be called inclusive because it is concerned exclusively with the seat.
> My question concerns both the hands and the seat.
>
> Specifically I am concerned with what happens to the distance between
> the hands and the seat during the beginning phases of the drive. Through
> a fixed velocity reference frame, if the hands and feet
(I think you meant "seat"?)
are moving at
> the same speed, then neither would appear to be moving, that is, in the
> beginning phases of the drive. Eventually of course, as the knees come
> down, the distance between the hands and seat will change, and the hands
> will move faster than the seat.
>
> Of course you can move the hands faster or slower than the seat in the
> beginning phases of the drive. I call this losing the connection — i.e.
> the connection between the hands and the seat.
With great respect, Charles, there is no conceivable connection between
hands & seat, since you are not screwed onto the seat & the seat is
purely a device to save your rump from wear & friction against the
slide-bed - it is in short just a lubricant. And if the hands move
faster than the seat, I'd say that has to indicate an even stronger
connection, & I'll try to explain why:
The power stroke is surely a messy affair, but we must make the best of
it that we can:
1. What we do first is decelerate the boat (the check) as we make an
inevitably slightly clumsy engagement of the blades. One reason for the
check is that the oar shafts are not rigid, so however rapidly we try to
load the blades there's a period during which the tendency to load the
stretcher as a means to loading the hands (& we can discuss the possible
flaws in that at another time) must check the boat as energy goes into
bending the shafts before the load you'd meant to apply is actually felt
by the blades.
2. Then you my extend the check by driving won the legs, so the boat
continues going slower than the body, but the body hardly accelerates.
3. If you do maintain the apparent back posture that you had at the
catch, then you'll start to accelerate the entire body & the seat will
seem to move slightly to the bow. If you do allow the back/femur angle
to open, then the seat (or maybe the top of the pelvis) may not seem to
move at all WRT a constant-velocity reference frame since the
significant upper body mass is being moved ahead faster than everything
else.
4. Once the visual perception of the back alignment rotates towards the
bow, then the seat may indeed seem static.
5. As the hands draw in, the boat does accelerate as ultimately it has
to be travelling at the same speed as the rower, their hands & every
other part of the body at the point of the finish
>
> Now to return to the question of ergs. I would want an off water
> training device for on water rowers that would help me train to keep
> this connection. And what I do not understand about sliding head ergs
> with seats that do not move much, is how they help you train to keep
> this connection.
>
> Warmest regards,
>
> Charles
>
I hope I've gone a little way towards explaining that the 'connection'
of which you write is about connecting the hands to the inert mass of
the body & through the feet to the boat.
When you lift a weights bar you don't have a seat & so there is no seat
with which to have even a notional connection, yet some if the actions
are not so dissimilar to rowing. When lifting you try to do so in the
manner most efficient for that purpose: this involves lifting also every
bit of the body except the feet, so there are lots of significant masses
other than the weights bar to be considered, & those masses are
encountering force reactions (loads) due not only to their static masses
but to the inertial reactions from their being first accelerated & then
decelerating as the lift is completed.
If you were to rotate that action through 90 degrees so it looks like a
rowing action, you'd need a seat, but you'd still not be supposing some
magical connection, postural or otherwise, between hands & seat. You
would, however, have a very different set of loads since gravity would
not be either helping nor hindering the (now horizontal) lift. It'd be
easier to get the weights bar (presumed to be sitting supported on a
frictionless horizontal track?) moving 'cos you wouldn't be working
against gravity. And you'd have a lot of work to do to stop the bar
from continuing past your head as gravity is not there to decelerate it.
But do you think anyone would be telling you to hold a particular back
posture WRT the horizon? I doubt it.
Well, rowing is different yet again, because now you're working against
a real frictional resistance, not trying to accelerate a friction-free
mass. But still the seat is just a handy artefact, a useful bit of kit,
& no more. And certainly nothing to which to imagine yourself in any
way connected. Indeed, when you are pulling your hardest you're hardly
in contact with the seat anyway.
I'm sure that's quite a basin-full of analogies & seemingly abstruse
argument, so I don't expect it to be easily digested. That said, I
think it's worth careful consideration before anyone tries to discount
it. Yet again, I'm trying to disentangle what we like or are told to
believe from what physics tells us is actually happening, which is never
a particularly palatable offering. Sorry 'bout that :)
Cheers -