m750

joined 11 months ago
[–] m750 2 points 6 months ago (1 children)

I'm impressed. I've got a inkjet that Is about 18 years old. I have to occasionally wipe off the print head, but otherwise has never needed repairs. The ender 3 we have has needed replacement parts from heads to hot ends and feeders, and every print requires specific to it setting. I can print to my hp using generic drivers without a second thought. 3d printers are far from that level of ease of use/ reliability. I'm glad your stuff worked, but that's the minority.

[–] m750 1 points 6 months ago

and a propper xlsx too

[–] m750 2 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Updated post with a csv and the ics updated too.

[–] m750 1 points 6 months ago

I guess people either hate affirm or newegg. But this whole Lemmy is otherwise dead just try to share a deal. Way to encourage engagement.

8
submitted 6 months ago by m750 to c/running
 

Details in the post. But I created the illusive, unofficial 18/63 full marathon training plan, which splits the difference between the 18/55 and the 18/55-70 plan. Feedback appreciated.

-7
submitted 6 months ago by m750 to c/buildapcsales
 

Please remove if against rules, but newegg has a 15% off up to 100 deal when using affirm payment method. I haven't used it so can't say about interest or fees, but understand it's related to ones own credit, and can be paid early. Ymmv.

It does bring some video cards into interesting ranges.

AFFIRM15DEC Get 15% off ($100 max) paying w/ Affirm + code: AFFIRM15DEC Expires 12/11/2023 23:59 PST

[–] m750 2 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

I've averaged just under 40 miles per week this year. I run typically 5/6x a week. I fit running in around life, so early before work, some times at night. If I'm dropping kids off to something I may park and run, instead of just going home. I have friend whom I regularly run with which helps with the winter dolldrums. Having races helps. I do take limited down weeks, only one single digit week all year. I manage to stay healthy by not over extending. I am leaving some gains out there, but I would rather be out there than on the sidelines.

Specifically for the winter/summer timing is key. I go when it's warmest in winter (I work at home), and coolest in the summer (early), I have a dreadmill, and a good heat/cold tolerance. Oh, and good gear. Gloves and tights and hand warmers are your friend.

I don't have real answers, this is my biggest milage running year ever by far, but also my best in terms of performance. Prs in 10k, and half by big margins.

Good luck, and keep at it.

[–] m750 2 points 8 months ago (2 children)

Not shocked at all. Running marathons fast, takes a fair amount of investment in running. While more miles is not the only answer to getting faster, one has to get a certain amount of miles in per week to be able to maintain fitness and be able to do workouts which will allow you to run the marathon fast.

Once you get to a certain amount of miles per week, and fitness, it is then about making sure you are getting quality miles in, but that line is like 40-55 miles per week. Lower than that, and you have to have raw talent and other cardio fitness to maintain the effort.

At least that's my experience, and I just barely bq'd at 55mpw the past two years, but I'm older with and 'easier' sub 3:20 bq time, sub 3:10 would be likely 63-70 mpw territory for me if I were under 45. (I'm aiming for 3:10 this spring)

[–] m750 3 points 9 months ago

When I'm training I do 3 up one down. Building three weeks, then the fourth week I drop back one week in duration. This is usually good for mid plan recovery, for just general recovery, I'd say do 75% of your normal work load. 2 shorter runs and a walk, 2 lighter lifts and a plyo session, in general recovery is doing less, not nothing at least for me.

Good luck.

[–] m750 3 points 9 months ago

Depends on the shoe, but I rarely get more than 3-500 miles. Just tossed a pair with only 3:16 on them, but they were worn down on the heel, and had started to make me excessive fatigue after even short runs. I got 500 from a pair of Hoka bondi 7's. I'm pretty hard on shoes, I have an aggressive wear pattern due to a shorter leg. I try to compensate by buying shoes on sale and rotating them as much as possible. But your milage may totally vary. But replace em when you think you need to, many ultra runners get 1k +

[–] m750 2 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Totally not judging. I was a new runner once too. Running is very specific activity, were the majority of improvements come simply from just running more. However, running more is a very slow process, you can't go from 0 miles, to 10 miles, and expect them to be fast. While you are fit, you aren't running fit, it's like being fit and not being lift heavy fit. Your plan is a get to the finish plan, which is good for ramping and getting to the finish line, but isn't really going to build speed, but that will come if you continue to work at it. Don't get discouraged, the improvement when you start are often the the biggest jumps you have. Good luck

[–] m750 2 points 9 months ago

Some of this is intentional by design. Shedding head count through willing attrition.

[–] m750 2 points 9 months ago

Yes, people can work on it, if they want to put effort in on that. Some times all they have energy for is the interval they are in. Some people can resist temptation, some people are addicted. We aren't all given the same ability.

[–] m750 8 points 9 months ago (2 children)

Some people are wired differently, ain't no thing

 

I'm planning on a spring full. I've successfully done pfitz 18 55 for two pr's, and 12 55. I like the plan, have not had issues with it, but in the quest to keep my training novel, and. Not increase the volume too much (55/60) is really as much as I have time, commitment, and recovery for at 45 with a family, job, and home life. Are there 18 or so week plans I can look at that have similar distance / intensity as the 18/55?

Also, if I do 18/55 again there are a number of tune up races which are always plotted for Saturdays.... Why? Almost no races are on Saturday. From a training plan perspective shouldn't they know this and design a plan with regular racing in mind? How do you all deal with these Saturday tune up races. In the past I've just done individual tt's with a target time on a known race course where it's more accurate that watch based 'gps' distance. This way I'm simulating the 6.3/13.3 that happens in real races and not the shortest distance that watch based tt's can do.

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