Speed and cadence sensor
netshock122
Posts: 11 Member
Hi Guys,
I have an exercise bike that has no hub (or at least not an accessible hub) - so my question is, are there any speed sensors that go on the crank? I see cadence do, but I wanted a speed sensor so I can play the virtual cycling games,
Thanks!!
I have an exercise bike that has no hub (or at least not an accessible hub) - so my question is, are there any speed sensors that go on the crank? I see cadence do, but I wanted a speed sensor so I can play the virtual cycling games,
Thanks!!
0
Replies
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I have a Wahoo RPM that goes on the crank on my indoor bike. Pairs well with Zwift.1
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Thanks. So yours is the RPM cadence sensor right? Looks like the RPM speed needs to be connected to the back wheel0
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misskris78 wrote: »I have a Wahoo RPM that goes on the crank on my indoor bike. Pairs well with Zwift.
For a wheel that doesn't have a hub you'd need to track down a magnet based speed sensor (magnet mounted on wheel, sensor on fork).0 -
Ah, I mean, it doesnt even have a wheel really, it's all encased so I cant access it. The only place i can add such a sensor is on the pedal really0
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netshock122 wrote: »Ah, I mean, it doesnt even have a wheel really, it's all encased so I cant access it. The only place i can add such a sensor is on the pedal really
The Wahoo RPM speed sensor is designed to fix to a wheel hub, the Wahoo RPM cadence sensor is designed to be fixed to the pedal crank or your shoe. Not sure if the speed sensor would work mounted very differently or how it would interpret the very different movement. Maybe you could tell whatever device you are linking to that a pedal or shoe mounted cadence sensor is a speed sensor - maybe?
If it did work it still isn't a true reflection of "speed" - you might be able to calibrate it to make yourself a cycling god and win those games!
Pedalling cadence and "speed" (effort in reality for indoors) aren't related.
You could be spinning your legs with no resistance at 100rpm barely putting any effort in or grinding against maximum resistance at 40rpm busting a gut.
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Thanks for the advice I'll have a think what to do1
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Yep. If you really want to Zwift, you have to get one of the newer calibrated trainers. My trainer is old-school and just adds some reasonable resistance without very much calibration. It has been highly reliable, and the speed is pretty close to what I achieve outdoors (+/- 2mph). I have Wahoo Fitness cadence monitor on my shoe and a speed monitor on my rear hub.
I also go to spin classes that use un-calibrated standard spin bikes (when I'm not in quarantine, that is). My cadence monotor still works, but there is no speed output. The "speed" of a spin bike is pretty arbitrary, anyway, since the resistance is totally arbitrary based on the brake knob.0
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