On my GPS I have the display set to riding time (i.e. time actually moving), and total time (i.e. since the ride started). The game is to keep both as close to each other as possible
Good point.. minimising faff time is worth many hours of hill training )
I've been reading up on all this again recently, used a HRM and a training book once but hardly used it again after a spring of painful, dull rides.
From what I understand - If you have a base, as it sounds like you have, you need to work hard on cardio to be able to raise the average speed that you can maintain at a heart rate zone that is sustainable as endurance effort rather than XC race pace. ie if you can go all day at 10mph / 120bpm (or whatever it is at a lower zone or % of max?), you raise your efficiency with intervals or similar training over say 8 weeks, then you can do 12mph at 120bpm all day, it shouldn't feel any more difficult. Interesting point about Jay Petervary's record stats - sounds like the pace of many 24hr riders, maybe less - but maintainable by him for >2 weeks.
If you only ever ride 6-12hrs of 10mph / 120bpm, that's all you'll ever do and doing more of it can increase fatigue.
And that's where I'm stuck at the mo, not sure whether I need to 'slow down to speed up' for a while then do the hill reps later, or mix the 2 in blocks, etc. A post on STW got some info but I'm no clearer on whether there are any rules of what to do when for endurance multi-dayers. Joe Friel's book keeps getting reccomended so I've got a copy on the way.
A "Bikepacker's training" thread next? Shudder.. sounds a bit serious to me. But I have done ok in recent years by following tips on how to make fun rides work for your fitness, it doesn't have to be all triathlete-type A stuff.
Any training experts on here?