No. No Blue and grey. I am using races as a workout (since i hate doing intervalls) and therefore energy saving is not a priority for me. So always green till red :)
@ That sounds like a good way to exchange intervals and still get the job done! I do the same, just that with double races I do have to save some energy. Otherwise all in 🙌😆
I must say that I truly enjoy watching your videos. I like the fact that you give insight into the course, strategy, and really where to apply your strength. The short format of 10 to 12 minutes is great.
Thanks James! My plan was to pretend to sprint, let someone else get nervous and go to the front so i could draft, and then put the second gear. Kind of worked right? 😅
I've had more than a few sprints end like this. Reality is network travel times (even at the speed of light over fiber optic cabling) plus server-side and client-side processing - all of that together with the distances involved when racing from people around the world - the time delay is over the .001 or .010 time that some sprints are settled by. I've had sprints decided by as little as .003 seconds, one time where 1st to 2nd was .005 and 1st to 3rd was .05, and more than one where what I saw on the screen did not match the result. It's just part of virtual racing. We could call these ties I suppose but Zwift always awards the win to somebody.
@@E.M.B.R That could explain it. If thats the case, then I’m a lucky bastard since I use wifi antenna and not fiber cable, which should be much slower 😅
Zwift should find a way to solve the differences between what's on our screens and final result. You placed 4th according to the image but 1st in the final.
As neat as it would be that would mean only racing against people within a ±1,000 km radius of their server who have an ideal internet connection - there's no way around latency as even light needs a tiny bit of time to travel through optical fiber
Tell me, do you get grey and blue graphic too on your races, or do you go always on the yellow and orange like an FTP effort throughout the race?
No. No Blue and grey. I am using races as a workout (since i hate doing intervalls) and therefore energy saving is not a priority for me. So always green till red :)
@ That sounds like a good way to exchange intervals and still get the job done!
I do the same, just that with double races I do have to save some energy. Otherwise all in 🙌😆
I must say that I truly enjoy watching your videos. I like the fact that you give insight into the course, strategy, and really where to apply your strength. The short format of 10 to 12 minutes is great.
Good job Diaz! Whatever the result, you raced it well.
Thanks James! My plan was to pretend to sprint, let someone else get nervous and go to the front so i could draft, and then put the second gear. Kind of worked right? 😅
I've had more than a few sprints end like this. Reality is network travel times (even at the speed of light over fiber optic cabling) plus server-side and client-side processing - all of that together with the distances involved when racing from people around the world - the time delay is over the .001 or .010 time that some sprints are settled by. I've had sprints decided by as little as .003 seconds, one time where 1st to 2nd was .005 and 1st to 3rd was .05, and more than one where what I saw on the screen did not match the result. It's just part of virtual racing. We could call these ties I suppose but Zwift always awards the win to somebody.
@@E.M.B.R That could explain it. If thats the case, then I’m a lucky bastard since I use wifi antenna and not fiber cable, which should be much slower 😅
Very Good !!😅
@@CarlosSosa-r5s ☺️🙌
Zwift should find a way to solve the differences between what's on our screens and final result. You placed 4th according to the image but 1st in the final.
@@PedroPrego I totally agree! This is the first time I’ve seen it happens. Like i said, i didn’t deserve this win
I would take it and run with it! 😁
@@jameskim3 I done it on the recording, but later, when i was editting my shame came to make the thumbnail, Wahaha 😂
As neat as it would be that would mean only racing against people within a ±1,000 km radius of their server who have an ideal internet connection - there's no way around latency as even light needs a tiny bit of time to travel through optical fiber