Update of the metronome tool

— Posted in Hardlopen by

In 2020 I created a simple page with downloadable metronome MP3 files, ranging from 170 to 200 BPM. Each MP3 is an hour long and can be looped in your favourite player. This was sufficient for my purposes, but I (somewhat) recently received some emails from people who used the page not (only) for running, but also for swimming and other activities. They asked for longer MP3's and lower BPM's. I've updated the tool accordingly, and BPM can now be set as low as 60 BPM and maximum duration is increased from 60 to 600 minutes (yes, that is 10 hours).

enter image description here

(Updated) tool for generating metronome MP3's

If you're interested, everything is free and can be found on https://www.reuneker.nl/files/metronome.

New calculator: from time and distance to pace

— Posted in Hardlopen by

I've made a new calculator today. You can enter a time and distance, and calculate the average pace. Nothing fancy, bu sometimes it's handy to do a quick calculation like that.

Let's say that you ran a 15K race in 1 hour and 15 minutes. What pace have you run at? It turns out that you had an average pace of 5 minutes per kilometer. And what about a 10M in 59 minutes and 58 seconds? Your pace was 3:44.

enter image description here Calculate pace from time and distance

Check out the calculators, including this new one, at http://www.reuneker.nl/files/runcalcc.

Mile pace to kilometer pace

— Posted in Hardlopen by

Today, we are going to do an easy calculation. We're going to convert mile pace to kilometer pace. It's fun to calculate this by hand, but for convenience, you can also use the calculator and many others at runcalc.site.

Say we want to know how fast a 6 minute mile is in terms of kilometer pace. In other words, how much time does a runner need to run a kilometer if he or she needs 6 minutes for a mile?

First, we multiply 6 by 60. To go from minutes to seconds. 6 times 60 is 360 seconds to run 1609 meters (i.e. one a mile). Now, we divide 360 seconds by 1609, to get the number of seconds needed to run one meter. 360 divided by 1609 is 0.22.

The next step is to multiply that number by 1000, to get the number of seconds needed to run a kilometer. The result is 223.74 seconds.

The last step is divide this number by 60, to get from seconds to minutes. This one's a bit tricky, because we want minutes and remaining seconds. If you simply divide 223.74 by 60, you get 3.73 minutes, but obviously that's not what we want (Because we could ask: how much time is 0.73 minutes?) So we remember the 3 minutes, which is 180 seconds (that's 3 times 60). Now we take our original number, 223.74 seconds and subtract 180 seconds, resulting in 43.74. That's the number of seconds remaining, meaning that a 6 minute mile corresponds to a 4 minute and 44 seconds kilometer.

If you don't want to do this by hand, go over to runcalc.site and let the website do it for you.

Training paces

— Posted in Hardlopen by

I have added a training pace calculator to the site. You can enter a recent race time or (reasonable) time you're striving for and calculate pace (ranges) for your long runs, easy runs, tempo runs, yasso's and faster sessions. Below is an example, but be sure to check out the calculator for yourself.

Pace Percentage
Long run pace 06:40-07:42 65%-75%
Easy run pace 06:40-06:15 75%-85%
Tempo run pace 05:16-05:00 95%-100%
Yasso pace (per km/mile) 04:38 108%
VO2max pace 04:33 110%
Speed form pace 04:21 115%

enter image description here Photo by Marvin Ronsdorf on Unsplash