Thursday, January 10

Colorado Springs, Day 1

yes, so, it's cold and snowy here at the USA Olympic Training Center, but y'all already knew that. it's also a strange hodgepodge of nice new facilities and old cruddy ones- and the new ones all sport sleek corporate images. the lounge of our dorm is sponsored by AT&T, the cups in the dining room are McDonald's, and there's a Bank of America ATM in the lobby. the complex has a shooting range, some pools, lots of gyms, meeting rooms, and dorms. USA Cycling has the backside/basement of a swimming pool building, and water from the pool seeps through the walls leaving bubbles and stains. The walls in the USAC offices are labeled "DO NOT DRILL/HAMMER INTO THIS WALL" or somesuch, probably because there's a pool on the other side.

the instructors at this USA Cycling Bill Woodul Race Mechanics' Clinic are heavy hitters- the heads of Mavic and Shimano neutral support, the President of IndyFab, Park Tools' head mechanic, and more. There are guys in this clinic who really want to start today as neutral support mechanics, who'd quit their lives and go on the road with a pro team if they could. It's pretty cool. oh, and there are two women... and about 52 men.

when we arrived at noon, the schedule in front of us showed us in class from 8am-9pm every day, with a break for lunch and dinner. today, we started with video of neutral race support jumping in and out of cars. it was amazing... imagine a COPS-style video camera mounted in a yellow Mavic car. It went like this:
(audio) We've got one
What is it?
Rear! Rear rear rear!
Cardoor opening
Cardoor slamming
(Guy running up to rider)
(15 seconds later, guy's opening the door and getting back in the car.)
let's roll..
-cut-
Pileup! Pileup!
(Three guys run out to the crash, each with 4 wheels in hand.)
After we watched this, dazzled at what great movie stars race mechanics are, they taught us rule number one: ALWAYS look back before jumping out of a car. And down. In case the ditch drops 8'.

then we took a brief field trip to the 7-Eleven track, where they explained that the banking was increased from 35 to 38 to accommodate faster riders. .. and that some tracks are not banked enough so fast riders can't even ride them. (they mentioned Marymoor.) It was covered in snow and you could see evidence of the resident infield fox. Inside the building, posters and news articles dating back to the 80's told the story of what a history that track has and the nationals team bikes were stored in cages. It was neat.

After that, a tour of the USA Cycling HQ. Most of the equipment is in Belgium or at a BMX clinic or something, but what was left behind is amazing- and mostly sponsor-donated by Mavic, Specialized, Teschner. USAC mechanics regaled us with stories of checking 15 bike boxes at a time at the airport, and we saw the storerooms full of clothing, tires, saddles, shoes, and more.

Before dinner, a head mechanic from FSA did a one-hour presentation about the physics of wheels and his ideas about wheelbuilding. the wheel, they say, is perfectly designed to handle the stresses we give it with the exception of sideways stuff- like losing traction in a corner. that's why low spoke counts work. the interesting thing to me is that radial-laced rear wheels are uncommon not just because radial is slightly less strong, but also because to make a radial wheel work you have to wind it up a little to force the radial spokes to act like trailers/pullers. getting them in that role takes a split second and makes the wheel feel a little, well, delayed.

And after dinner, a two hour presentation about the rulez-- they're pushing hard for all of us to go home with both a mechanic's and an offical's license. it is useful since the last thing you want to do as a mechanic is fix someone's bike but then break the rules in the process and have them thrown out. You know, like giving someone a tube on a NORBA race. Or taking too long on a track wheel change.

tomorrow, classes on wheelchanges, pressure washers, track support, and more.

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