Paulwho100
Active Member
I hear the is an out door velodrome in Portsmouth and was wondering if it was any good and does it have a good track surface??
I have been to both. Calshot is a tiny 140 metre wood indoor track, in a freezing old aircraft hanger on the end of Calshot Spit, sticking out into the Solent. The rest of the Activities Centre seems well heated, but the building containing the track is horrible. It's a good place to learn how to ride though!
The Mountbatten Centre in Portsmouth is a peculiar "track", 3 laps to a mile, huge, not a great surface, and is only rarely used as a track venue, because there are two shallow banking each end of the finish straight, the rest is a big curve and flat, so the thing is a D shape. It is used a lot for coaching kids on road bikes, a cycle race school used to run there, training, and for road bike circuit racing in evenings, as it's almost a road circuit without sharp corners! Not recommended for a proper trackie. Oh, and the wind blows in good and strong from a back lagoon of Portsmouth Harbour, which it is adjacant to.
I don't have experience of any other but the surface there is better than any of the roads around where I live :-) We have been going down to the Mountbatten centre for the last six months or so on a Wednesday night. As OldRoadman says they do youngsters training from 6pm and then an adults session from about 7.45. Now the adults sessions consists of two groups completing circuits for about an hour. The faster group can get upwards of 30+mph and the slower group tends to stay at around 21 or below. It's good fun and don't worry if you don't think you will keep up there is always a few just going round at their own pace. You'll be left alone to do this as long as you keep an eye on the groups and don't get in the way, In general the atmosphere if very good. If you do decide to come along - come early, they have had to start closing the list for the adult session as it is getting too busy, but come early and sign on and if you get your name on the list you will get on. Cheers
What you say may well be right during the racing season, and I'd certainly agree with the comment about testosterone. But out of season like now it is not run in a formal race style. Each pair leads for a lap then splits off and drops to the back, this repeats till you get to the front again, when the process repeats. It is of no interest who is leading when the organisers blow the whistle to stop. You are discouraged from it but people do switch groups mid run. The session lasts an hour.
In season the session runs for, I think, forty minutes and three laps. The three laps is when that pace really gets going, and those are run under BC rules. Cheers[/quote]
That is what the participants optimistically refer to as "racing"....still if they are happy and feel good about it, why not? Just cut out the ridiculous antics in the last lap or two and nobody gets hurt....