So you say, having never used one or having no personal experience of one.
See, training with power is great. But it's only relevant to yourself if you're actually using for training and not just waving watts in the pub.
Really it makes no difference how accurate your power meter is, literally none at all if you're using it for training. What makes a difference is consistency. If it is consistently accurate or inaccurate it matters. As long as it gives the same number for the same effort every time then it's ok. It makes no difference if your power meter is saying 300 and John is saying 330 and Jeffrey's is 390. As long as they are consistently accurate to themselves.
Now, I've used a stages, and I still do. Along with 2 power2max and a current power tap. I've owned 2 gen 1 power2maxes, 2 gen 1 stages, 3 generation 1 powertaps. To be fair, stages were unreliable at launch but I've had no problems with my gen2 and would recommend them to anyone. As long as you are aware that your powertap will always read lower than your power2max or srm and you know to adjust your effort upward or downward to compensate then it's fine. It's no different to a stages reading higher or lower for any given effort as long as it is constant in that reading, and they are.
I know it's popular to hate them, and that's fine if you want to jump on that band waggon but it's simply not true anymore that they're rubbish or a toy. Given that you can pick them up for £380 or what ever online then they are cheap enough, at half the price of both my power2maxes.
I've just had a look at prices, while a power2max seems cheap on the face of it. If you haven't already got a crank, once you include arms, rings, bolts and a bb it's almost twice the price of a stages including a new ultegra crank. Bear in mind you'll end up with a better shifting , lighter crank for half the outlay of a power2max given the euro/pound rate at the moment.
You overpaid for your powertaps and p2m by the sound of it.
Also, Powertap, SRM, P2m (basically copy of SRM) have been around for years. They're proven, tested, pretty reliable and have decent local service partners.
I'll buy the Ford for £1000 vs. the Lada for £800 every day of the week.
Decent local service partners? Are you joking? Srm send away to Germany, power2max send away to Germany, powertap send to Paligap, get in the queue, wait for parts, argue about the bill and warranty cover. When I've had a problem with my stages, I've had a new one two days later.
So you say, having never used one or having no personal experience of one.
See, training with power is great. But it's only relevant to yourself if you're actually using for training and not just waving watts in the pub.
Really it makes no difference how accurate your power meter is, literally none at all if you're using it for training. What makes a difference is consistency. If it is consistently accurate or inaccurate it matters. As long as it gives the same number for the same effort every time then it's ok. It makes no difference if your power meter is saying 300 and John is saying 330 and Jeffrey's is 390. As long as they are consistently accurate to themselves.
Now, I've used a stages, and I still do. Along with 2 power2max and a current power tap. I've owned 2 gen 1 power2maxes, 2 gen 1 stages, 3 generation 1 powertaps. To be fair, stages were unreliable at launch but I've had no problems with my gen2 and would recommend them to anyone. As long as you are aware that your powertap will always read lower than your power2max or srm and you know to adjust your effort upward or downward to compensate then it's fine. It's no different to a stages reading higher or lower for any given effort as long as it is constant in that reading, and they are.
I know it's popular to hate them, and that's fine if you want to jump on that band waggon but it's simply not true anymore that they're rubbish or a toy. Given that you can pick them up for £380 or what ever online then they are cheap enough, at half the price of both my power2maxes.
I've just had a look at prices, while a power2max seems cheap on the face of it. If you haven't already got a crank, once you include arms, rings, bolts and a bb it's almost twice the price of a stages including a new ultegra crank. Bear in mind you'll end up with a better shifting , lighter crank for half the outlay of a power2max given the euro/pound rate at the moment.