A interesting tip to remember when looking at these maps:
When you zoom in on a known popular climb, you can see that it is 'hot' which indicates a lot of riders, BUT it also has a lot more GPS data because the rider is riding much slower uphill. The Garmin's typically take one data point every second.
A interesting tip to remember when looking at these maps:
When you zoom in on a known popular climb, you can see that it is 'hot' which indicates a lot of riders, BUT it also has a lot more GPS data because the rider is riding much slower uphill. The Garmin's typically take one data point every second.
A interesting tip to remember when looking at these maps:
When you zoom in on a known popular climb, you can see that it is 'hot' which indicates a lot of riders, BUT it also has a lot more GPS data because the rider is riding much slower uphill. The Garmin's typically take one data point every second.
A interesting tip to remember when looking at these maps:
When you zoom in on a known popular climb, you can see that it is 'hot' which indicates a lot of riders, BUT it also has a lot more GPS data because the rider is riding much slower uphill. The Garmin's typically take one data point every second.
Ah, so the slower we go, the "hotter" we are? Interesting observation!