Time Trials & Training Feedback
Continuous training needs data. Not to feed ego — but to confirm you are adapting, staying healthy, and applying the right stimulus.
If we don’t measure, we guess.
Your continuous training program requires feedback on your developing fitness, durability and running economy. A properly controlled time trial gives us honest information.
What Is A Time Trial?
Repeat the exact same physical workout and measure the result. Simple. Comparable. Honest.
Why Practise A Time Trial?
- Define progress and training effectiveness.
- Help dictate future training stimulus.
- Show possible looming illness, injury or overload.
- Direct immediate training decisions.
- Boost motivation and race confidence.
The Big Mistake
Most runners turn every test into a race. That ruins the value of the data.
- Do not exceed your DTI ceiling.
- Stay controlled and repeatable.
- Focus on calm breathing and economy.
- We are testing adaptation — not bravery.
The DTI-Capped Time Trial
The BP40+ model uses controlled aerobic time trials. That means your heart rate ceiling matters more than raw pace.
If your body becomes fitter, stronger and more economical, you should cover the same course faster at the same DTI.
That is honest aerobic progress.
How To Practise A Time Trial
Keep it boring. Keep it repeatable. Keep it controlled.
1. Set Your DTI
- Calculate and know your DTI ceiling.
- Set your watch alarm if needed.
- Use a chest strap HR monitor if possible.
- Warm up 2–5 minutes very easily.
2. Build The Course
- Choose a flat and uninterrupted route.
- Use the same surface each time.
- Define exact start and finish markers.
- Treadmills work brilliantly for control.
3. Run The Trial
- Start your stopwatch.
- Race the course — but stay under DTI.
- Focus on calm form and relaxed breathing.
- Stop the watch immediately on finishing.
Reading Your Result
Your time trial result should trend down over time if the body is adapting well. But remember — the body is not a robot.
| Possible Influence | Likely Effect On TT | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Supportive Training | Faster TT at same DTI | Improving aerobic economy and durability. |
| Heat / Wind | Slightly slower result | Environmental disruption — normal. |
| Stress / Poor Sleep | Reduced performance | Nervous system overload affecting recovery. |
| Looming Illness | Unexpected slowdown | Potential early warning sign. |
| Functional Niggle | Reduced rhythm and economy | Possible mechanical compensation pattern. |
📈 What Is A Great Result?
A ~3.5% improvement over roughly six weeks is a very strong return.
That level of improvement often reflects:
- Developing aerobic capacity
- Better running economy
- Improved respiratory strength
- Healthier nervous system function
- Good training consistency
It may also justify raising DTI slightly (commonly ~7–12 bpm) if overall health and recovery remain strong.
Brad Pamp — Example TT Progression
Below is a practical example of progressive TT improvement while holding the same DTI ceiling.
| Time Trial | DTI Ceiling | Time |
|---|---|---|
| TT1 – 6.3.23 | 141 bpm | 48:45 |
| TT2 – 13.3.23 | 141 bpm | 48:31 |
| TT3 – 20.3.23 | 141 bpm | 48:29 |
| TT4 – 27.3.23 | 141 bpm | 48:07 |
| TT5 – 3.4.23 | 141 bpm | 48:08 |
| TT6 – 10.4.23 | 141 bpm | 47:54 |
| TT7 – 17.4.23 | 141 bpm | 47:41 |
| TT8 – 24.4.23 | 141 bpm | 47:33 |
📲 Then What?
- Send your result to Brad Pamp.
- Forward each TT result as you repeat it.
- Example: TT2 @ 50:45 at DTI 141 bpm.
- Garmin users: connect via Find Friends.
⌚ Garmin Privacy Path
- Home → More
- Settings → Profile & Privacy
- Set profile, activities, steps and badges to “My connections”.
- This allows us to follow progress.
Final Pampy Take
Time trials are not there to flatter your ego.
They are there to expose reality.
If your body is adapting well,
the same DTI should slowly produce faster times.
That means the engine is improving,
the structure is coping,
and the training is working.
Measure. Interpret. Adjust. Repeat.
