Equipment: The CompuTrainer Preseason rites such as indoor training have led many a cyclist to consider February and March the cruelest of months. The monotony of spinning to the drone of rollers can make vacuuming the carpet seem a preferable rec-room activity. The CompuTrainer, however, provides the forward-looking cyclist with interactive diversion of almost Mystlike magnitude–and an accurate measure of fitness from which to start spring. The system consists of a bicycle stand, a computer-controlled load generator to regulate resistance, a heart-rate sensor that clips to your ear, and interactive software that runs on your Nintendo Resistance, which you control with a handlebar-mounted microprocessor, ranges from 50 watts (almost coasting) to 750 watts (beyond Indurain). You can use the unit in stand-alone mode or hook it up to your TV to race against an on-screen computer opponent; either way, you get My one complaint, that the heart-rate monitor isn’t wireless, is minor. What’s tougher is the ego-bruising that comes from losing repeatedly to a virtual competitor. But for the precision ergometer complete with entertainment value, I’ll come to terms with getting dropped by the CompuTrainer. $1,249. From RacerMate Inc., 3016 N.E. Blakeley St., Seattle, WA 98105; 800-522-3610. |
Equipment: The CompuTrainer
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