Pace Calculator
mlb929
Posts: 1,974 Member
http://www.runworks.com/calculator.html
I"m always trying to figure out what I should be running at to meet my goals in training as well as for a race. I found this calculator today and hope someone else finds it useful as well.
I"m always trying to figure out what I should be running at to meet my goals in training as well as for a race. I found this calculator today and hope someone else finds it useful as well.
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I am checking it out right now...looks quite neat! Thanks....0
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awesome!!0
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I use this one and love it: http://www.coolrunning.com/engine/4/4_1/96.shtml
Use it every day and it's very user friendly0 -
bump0
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bump
Can you enlighten me? I've seen this on other posts "bump"...what is it suppose to mean? I'm a newbie....0 -
Macmillan is a good pace calculator too
Bump is just a way to get the thread to the top, or for people to tag it so it shows up in thier my topics section.0 -
thank you for sharing!0
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And for those using a treadmill during the winter, another helpful chart (with incline conversions too) is at:
http://www.hillrunner.com/training/tmillchart.php0 -
Adding incline to the treadmill to 'simulate' wind resistance is one of the biggest myths on MFP. You leave the incline at 0 unless you're going over 11 mph since the wind resistance is insignificant at speeds slower than that.
http://www.hillrunner.com/jim2/id110.html0 -
I agree with Biggreen, I've read a lot about treadmill running since that is a new method of training for me. I run in A LOT of wind, so that have read about training in wind too. I'm a 0 incline girl, since my treadmill runs are for intervals and tempo runs as very specific training paces.0
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