T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1240.1 | Exceed seems to do ok | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Tue Jul 11 1989 11:20 | 10 |
|
Over July 4th I rode with someone who was trying to evaluate
Exceed (since they are sponsoring her in RAAM). Its consistency
is fairly syrupy, yes. She seemed to be doing fine with it, but
we did stop for a cheeseburger one day and a baked potato another. :-)
It's worth a try.
-john
PS: Couldn't you consider ice cream as liquid nutriment as well?
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1240.2 | Only see it in the catalog... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Is there life after drywall? | Tue Jul 11 1989 11:29 | 16 |
| > On the advise of a friend, I have bought some Exceed drink mix.
> I mixed some up (one packet to a quart, as instructed) and let
> it chill. I tried a 1/2 glass of it from the 'frig - yick! It was
> very thick and syrup-ey. I don't think I'd like it when warm.
Hmmm. I tried a can of Exceed a while back and it didn't seem syrupy to
me. Great on pancakes, too :-). It's been a while, but I remeber it as
being about the same as ERG. I don't have a regular supplier (got the
eval. package via mailorder) so I can't retest very easily.
What SEEMS to be the case is that EXCEED is not just one drink, though,
but 2 different drinks - in very similar-looking packages. One is an
electrolyte replacement/sugar drink, and the other is a
carbohydrate-loading drink or something. Perhaps you got the wrong one
by mistake?
ken
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1240.3 | Exceed helped me over the Continental Divide | AKOV11::FULLER | | Tue Jul 11 1989 12:04 | 5 |
| It is heavy, although it is not a problem (in my stomach). I think
you drank too much at one time, when I use it when riding, I just
take sips through the ride. Follow with some water.
steve
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1240.4 | NOT ON THE RUN... | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Tue Jul 11 1989 13:14 | 6 |
| Try GATORADE & water (50-50). It's not too sweet, no consistency
problems. Let's face it, after 50 miles in the bottle on a hot
summer day there isn't much that's gonna be appealing when your
throat's screamin' for something.
CHIP :-)
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1240.5 | Water it down | FSTVAX::HANAUER | Mike... Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Tue Jul 11 1989 13:19 | 9 |
| These "energy" drinks are quite controversial among doctors.
Some that I have heard advise plain water but add that if you really
want to drink them to be sure to dilute first.
~Mike
[about to leave for a 2 1/2 week cycling trip down the coast of
Oregon and Northern California]
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1240.6 | Two kinds of Exceed??? | EUCLID::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO6B-2/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Tue Jul 11 1989 13:47 | 7 |
| re. .2 Ken, you may have hit it. I got the carbo-loading
stuff. I didn't know there was a replacement/sugar version. But,
come to think of it, the stuff in my friend's waterbottle was amber
in color and this stuff is greenish.
Anyone know for sure if there's two kinds of Exceed? Or are
there just two different flavors? If there are two kinds,
I'll try the other. Meanwhile, I'll dilute what I got. - Chris
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1240.7 | carbos or electrons... you choose | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Tue Jul 11 1989 14:38 | 14 |
| Yes, Diane mentioned that as well. It sounds like you want the
electrolyte kind. If you are trying to do l-o-n-g distance on a
liquid diet, however, you want the carbo-loading one. The other
may not be syrupy but it won't do you much good if you're trying
to live on it. The kind I tried must have been the carbo-loading
one.
My personal electrolyte-disruption drink is still cola, drunk
straight, then followed by some water a couple miles further on
down, once the carbon dioxide has blown off. And ... now seriously,
I've actually run into other cyclists who said they favored cola
even before I mentioned it.
-john
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1240.8 | | SIMUL8::JD | JD Doyle | Tue Jul 11 1989 14:44 | 32 |
|
There's 3 kinds of Exceed
High Carbo Source. Glucose Polymers, Fructose and maltodextrin about
80 gms of Carbo per 8oz and about 200 calories. This is about 20%+ solution
too much for "on the ride" replacement. It is think and syrupy.
Energy replacement. Glucose Polymers (Polycose) etc about 70 calories per cup
and 7% solution. This is about the max recommended concentration.
Nutrition Supplement. This is a shake style drink is a repackaged version of
a hospital drink that they sold for people that couldn't eat solid food. It's
got fat and protein in it.
Gatorade is a little less sophisticated, in that is doesn't has as much fancy
carbohydrates in it, and TODAY's (not tomorrow's or yesterday's) info says that
the long-chained polymers don't really matter. It has 50 calories per 8oz and
is in about 5% solution. I wouldn't water down Gatorade and expect to get much
out of it. @25 calories per cup, you're not getting much carbohydrate into your
system. 1 bottle per hour would supply you with about 150 calories, so you
might still want to supplement with some solid food.
There's a million of these products in health food stores, and they're all
rather expensive and relatively similar. I'd say stick with the product that
best matches your palatte and wallet. If you're going to do a race that is
supplying a specific drink, you might as well train with it.
I'm drinking Gatorade now at full strength. It seems to work well. I've also
been experimenting with the high carbo drinks in the morning before the race
because I have problems eating a decent breakfast at 5AM.
JD
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1240.9 | Another Vote for the Gator | GSFSWS::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Thu Jul 13 1989 09:59 | 26 |
| I experimented with EXCEED last year. I used the electrolyte
replacement powder (orange flavor) for short rides (<50mi) and the
carbo loader for longer rides. Although they both seemed to work
for me I found that the cost and availability (not in your local 7-11)
of the electrolyte drink didn't give me any more of a boost than what
I get from GATORADE (full strength) so I stopped using it since I can
get GATORADE virtually anywhere, and, if I forget my water bottle
entirely I've found that there small bottle fits nicely in a water
bottle holder (to bad they aren't plastic bottles - marketing could
go wild with this - disposable water bottles for cyclist on the run
or would that be wheel). I also discontinued using the Carbo product
which also helped me (mostly because I'm not doing the distance this
year) but the best product I've tried in this category is ULTRA ENERGY.
If I'm serious enough to want to use something besides bagels and fig
bars on a very long ride I'll spend the bucks and buy UE since I can
easily get another 30 miles in without bonking, than when using the
traditional stuff or EXCEED Carbo.
A lot of the Ultra Marathoners have their own concoctions which they
mix up from ingredients purchased in Natural Food stores (Joe Weider
Energy Products, etc.) but everyone has to find what works best for them.
For price and availability you can't beat GATORADE straight from the
grocers fridge for short rides.
Jerry
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1240.10 | On every streetcorner, even in Europe | CESARE::JOHNSON | Matt Johnson, DTN 871-7473 | Thu Jul 13 1989 10:19 | 7 |
| Gatorade may not be the ultimate electrolyte replacement drink,
but I can find it in little mom and pop stores in places like
Dogliani, Italy! It's about twice as expensive here as in the
U.S., but still cheap for what it can do for you at the end of
a tough ride.
MATT
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1240.11 | Cheeper green.... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Is there life after drywall? | Thu Jul 13 1989 11:55 | 5 |
| BTW, for those what like Gatorade green flavor (melon-lime) it's avail.
in powdered format and comes in at about 1/2 price (can about 1/2 size
of a 1 lb. coffee can, makes 8 qts., about $3.50 i think?). Available
wherever powdered Gatorade is sold!
ken
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1240.12 | | SX4GTO::HOLT | Robert Holt @ UCS | Fri Jul 14 1989 23:37 | 5 |
|
Like at REI in Cupertino, CA.
-bob, stocking up on envelopes of dry gatorate to take behind the
Iron Curtain..
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1240.13 | CYCLING ARTICLES | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Mon Jul 17 1989 09:29 | 4 |
| There are a couple of good articles in this month's CYCLING magazine
on drink mixes/ratios and training in the heat.
Chip :-)
|
1240.14 | Gatorade: I found it! | DELNI::B_FLANNERY | Running in Cycles | Mon Jul 17 1989 11:24 | 7 |
| When I rode the Charles River Wheelmen spring century this year, I
stopped for some Gatorade at a grocery store out in the the southern
exurbs of Boston. I'd been drinking water and eating fruit, granola, etc,
but was becoming fatigued and a little disoriented by the sun and heat.
I can't say I like the taste of Gatorade (I've a similar reaction to
freeze dried food), but it provided a nice boost to finish the ride.
|
1240.15 | Don't throw out those film canisters | VERVE::BUCHANAN | Bat | Mon Jul 17 1989 13:45 | 7 |
| I also use the powdered Gatorade, its cheap and easy and I get right in the
supermarket.
Little hint:
Save your old 35mm film canisters to hold your gatorade mix on long rides.
Each one is perfect for one bottle. Remember to wash out the canisters
first bacause they stink.
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1240.16 | MiniPotent | GSFSWS::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Mon Jul 17 1989 13:58 | 11 |
| re: -1
Great suggestion ....you should send it to CYCLIST.....they'll send
you a $25 reward and a tee shirt :-)
Better yet...send it to General Mills and tell them they should
package the stuff in similar containers that we could buy off the
shelf in the super market.....hmmmmmmmmm wonder if they came out
with a six pack....think Coors would be in trouble ;-)
Jerry
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1240.17 | Wrong supermarket! | BROKE::HOLDEN | | Mon Jul 17 1989 22:58 | 7 |
|
Actually, I admit it, I like Exceed. I mix it to taste rather than
what the package says and try to keep it strong to get more sugar.
Also, I found it in a Safeway in Colorado Springs cheap. So, maybe
just ask your local supermarket why they don't carry it ;^).
Russ
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1240.18 | try FOOD | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Tue Jul 18 1989 12:39 | 41 |
| In a race this past weekend, I knew I wasn't going to finish in
earthshattering times of 31 to 38 hours so I elected to avoid any
of the expensive solutions and consume FOOD for energy replacement.
FOOD has a number of advantages missing in the more expensive
solutions. The most desirable is variety. The following is an
estimate of what I consumed between 5am Friday and 9 am Sunday
when I finished -- the race started at 6 am.
3 pancakes approximate 6", bisquick complete, before the ride.
12 to 14 peanut butter and Jelly sandwiches.
3 or 4 turkey sandwiches
1 turkey and cheese s/w
2 large dishes of pasta with tomato sauce
a bowl of lentil soup
40 or so granola bars, I think these led to some rough spots in my
mouth, orange juice yesterday morning burned.
a dozen or so bananas
about 6 cups of coffee
about 6 cans of diet coke
a dozen or so cookies of various types, once I even ate a few
cookies just because my computer needed the plastic bag, it was
raining, then I said the hell with it I can't read the computer at
night anyway
two dozen or so nuprin or aspirin for the road rash I got in (2 every 4
hours, more or less)
another race the night before this race
6 french toast with butter and syrup
7 gallons of water, more or less.
elapsed time 50:46, 3:35 better than last year. I should have done even
better because I finished with lots of energy, too much in fact.
But, I guess if you want really good performance you have to lay out
the bucks for fancy stuff.
After the race I found some lasagna and ordered two servings. they
were both consumed in only a few minutes, then I looked around for
something to eat.
ed
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1240.19 | Ed's Winnabikeo | GSFSWS::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Tue Jul 18 1989 13:39 | 12 |
| re. -1
> 2 large dishes of pasta with tomato sauce
> a bowl of lentil soup
Ok, I'll go along with the other stuff, but how do you get
these two in your mouth while keeping one hand on the bars?
Sounds like you could use one of those Cannondale Buggers
as a chuck wagon.....self contained no less with a propane
stove for your pancakes and a porta-potty for your long
distance events ;-)
Jerry
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1240.20 | I did get off. | BANZAI::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Tue Jul 18 1989 15:58 | 5 |
| I got off the bike a few times, even slept for 2:15.
50:46 is a heck of a lot of time for the HBI to endure.
ed
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1240.21 | Add time for digestion | MCIS2::DELORIEA | Common sense isn't | Tue Jul 18 1989 16:24 | 15 |
|
>> 3 pancakes approximate 6", bisquick complete, before the ride.
>> 12 to 14 peanut butter and Jelly sandwiches.
>> 3 or 4 turkey sandwiches
>> 1 turkey and cheese s/w ...............etc.
>> elapsed time 50:46, 3:35 better than last year. I should have done even
>> better because I finished with lots of energy, too much in fact.
ed,
All that for a 25K time trial? No wonder it took so long ;-)
Tom
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1240.22 | 604.8 mi | BANZAI::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Tue Jul 18 1989 16:48 | 5 |
| "25K"
haha.
ed
|
1240.23 | any guess? | NEXUS::DEUMBERTO | | Tue Jul 18 1989 17:35 | 3 |
| Speaking of drinks, does anyone know whats in the little brown bottles
the PRO's use? I saw Laurent Fignon drinking one a few days ago in
the Tdf.
|
1240.24 | Another vote for Gatorade and FOOD | NAC::KLASMAN | | Thu Jul 20 1989 08:57 | 20 |
| < Note 1240.18 by NOVA::FISHER "Rdb/VMS Dinosaur" >
-< try FOOD >-
I think I'll have to agree with Ed. After having tried virtually every
high-carbo, high-zoot energy drink and having mixed results (some good, some
extreme intestinal distress) I've returned to full strength Gatorade and FOOD.
I've had trouble with dehydration during long events using high-carbo drinks,
possibly because they usually contain no potassium (and bananas don't set well
with me when riding). During my 24-hr TT last weekend (323m ridden) I
consumed over a gallon of Gatorade, 2 spaghetti dinners, 2 turkey and cheese
sandwiches, a couple PBJ sandwiches, 1/2 PowerBar and lots of water. Had no
trouble with dehydration (tho it wasn't very hot) or lack of energy. (tho I
did nap briefly on the bike and saw all kinds of creatures that weren't really
there at about 20hrs into the ride).
BTW, Gatorade comes in several different flavors to provide variety. I used
the powdered stuff mentioned earlier since its less expensive.
Kevin
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1240.25 | | WITNES::HANNULA | At a loss for words | Thu Jul 20 1989 11:26 | 5 |
| For those of you who use these carbo drinks, do you use them
primarily as a substitute for eating on long rides? or more as an
energy boost/food supplement?
-Nancy
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1240.26 | I've tried both... | NAC::KLASMAN | | Thu Jul 20 1989 13:42 | 21 |
| < Note 1240.25 by WITNES::HANNULA "At a loss for words" >
> For those of you who use these carbo drinks, do you use them
> primarily as a substitute for eating on long rides? or more as an
> energy boost/food supplement?
My original intention was to use them as a substitute for food in long races,
ala the RAAM riders using Ultra-Energy. So I tried all the very high-carbo
drinks (400+ cals/bottle) I could find, except U-E, which at $6 or more per
bottle is impossibly expensive. U-E was designed as a food substitute for use
WHILE riding, while all the others are food supplements not for use while
riding.
As I said before, I had mixed results with those drinks, and am now using
Gatorade, water and some food while on the bike and lots of food at breaks.
With this combo I've done my best ultra ride ever, without any hint of
digestive, intestinal or dehydration problems. However, the jury's still
out... I'll have to test it some more before I'm convinced.
Kevin
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