| ABOUT 'RIDE DATA'
A climb's BASIS or ZERO
BASIS is the time a professional would ride the climb.
MyTime is your raw time posted for any given
climb.
TimeDifferential is the time differential
between the BASIS and myTime.
PercentDiff is the time differential percentage
differential bewteen the BASIS and myTime.
EffortLevel is a subjective judegement of
effort by you. We factor your effortLevel
into our calculations as we assume that not every effort can be at 100%.
We adjust for this fact.
- effortAdjustPercentDiff (C%)
EffortAdjustPercentDiff is the value result
in consideration of your indicated effortLevel.
The ZERO TIME is the estimated time you might ride on any given inputs
of 'Q' and some climb metrics. We are developing a JAVASCRIPT CLIMB Calculator
so you may quickly estimate how you might perform on any given climb.
ABOUT CLIMBS
- CLIMB RATING

The CLIMB RATING is
an indexed value of the climb based on start elevation, elevation gain,
and length. There is no upper limit. The following chart shows correlation
between commonly used difficulty ratings used for UCI
events and BikesUp!'s proprietory rating system. The CLIMB RATING considers
start elevation, elevation gain, and distance.
| Descriptive |
Standard Categorization |
Climb Rating |
| Extraordinary class 2 |
HC
|
100 > |
| Extraordinary class 1 |
HC
|
80 > 99 |
| Difficult class 2 |
1
|
60 > 79 |
| Difficult class 1 |
2
|
40 > 59 |
| Moderate |
3
|
20 > 39 |
| Easy |
4
|
0 > 19 |
Promoters of events sanctioned by the Union
Cyclist International (UCI) have traditionally used a cardinal ranking
system from 4 to 1 where "1" considered tres difficile. Climbs
with perceived difficulty greater than "1" have classification
as Hor de Category ("HC"). In Spanish events, "HC"
climbs may be referred to as "Esp" (special). Promoters give
consideration to a climbs placement within an event, i.e.: the closer
to the finish may cause the climb to be ranked more difficult than the
climb might otherwise rank.
As ActiveRiders and Guests enter a climb's data into the BikesUp! database,
thus generating a Climb Rating, the WORLD
RANKING is the ranking of the climb compared to the other climbs in the
database.
ABOUT 'Q' and 'Qr'
Your 'Q' is a normalized
value as to how well you, on average, will perform on any climb. A golf
handicap uses the same concept. You can expect to have a value like 12.5
or 23. Essentially, this value is how you compare to the BASIS
time, or the time a professional might produce for any given course.
Your 'Q' is a handicap
unique to your personal ride performance on a defined bicycle hill climb.
Our proprietary algorythm uses the information that you enter in the database
and normalizes or standardizes your performance. Your 'Q'
is a performance value corrected for a climb's difficulty.
You need to post rides on an identified hill climb in the database. You
begin to establish your 'Q'
with your first post. As you continue to post rides, we perform calculations
on ten of your most recent fifteen posts. We discard the best two efforts.
We also correct for extrordinary 'slow' efforts by allowing only maximum
times of 100% of your current 'Q'
value in the calculations.
-
First, you need to know the BASIS
for the hill climb. You can find the BASIS
when viewing climb metric information. Also you will find the BASIS
when viewing information about your posts. The BASIS
is the time it would take a rider with a 'Q'
of "0" to complete the climb.
-
Enter your 'Q' and
use our calculator to figure out your ZERO-TIME.
The ZERO-TIME is the time
estimated for you to complete the climb based on your 'Q'.
- You can use your 'Q'
as a comparison to your friends or just for yourself. Or maybe just
for fun! In anycase it works like this. Enter five data points or rides
on a climb selected from the database for a fully qualified 'Q'
we do some math, and presto, you have a 'Q'.
Now tell your friend so that he or she will have one too.
- 'Qr' is the 'Q'
generated for the indicated ride.
- How to use your 'Q' in designated
Events
BikesUp! is developing "Q-Events"
with bicycle hill climb event promoters. These events will have "GROSS"
and "NET" classifications. When you enter an event, the promoter will
register your 'Q' and normalize
your result from your time, in this way compete on an even par with all
participants.
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