Stroke Rate vs. DPS: How to Fix Dead Spots & The Windmilling Trap 🎧 cover art

Stroke Rate vs. DPS: How to Fix Dead Spots & The Windmilling Trap 🎧

Stroke Rate vs. DPS: How to Fix Dead Spots & The Windmilling Trap 🎧

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

Do you feel like you're putting in a massive amount of effort in the pool, but just not getting anywhere? Water is 800 times denser than air, which means any hesitation or "dead spot" in your stroke acts like an invisible anchor. In this episode, Marina and Finn dive into the physics of swimming speed, how to avoid the "windmilling trap," and how a simple waterproof metronome can literally hack your muscle memory.


💦 *In this episode we discuss:* 💦

• 0:00 The frustrating feeling of "stalling out" in the water

• 1:00 Why water density turns a slight pause into a massive penalty

• 2:23 Enter the swim metronome: Wetronome & Finis Tempo Trainer

• 4:48 The Speed Equation: Stroke Rate vs. Distance Per Stroke (DPS)

• 5:38 The "Windmilling Trap" (spinning your tires on ice)

• 6:55 How to systematically find your personal sweet spot

• 8:47 The ultimate test: The Tempo Ramp-Up Drill

• 10:41 Breakdown of the 3 Tempo Trainer Modes (and when to use them)

• 13:16 Why a higher tempo is an open water survival mechanism

• 14:14 Safety first: The importance of a safe swim buoy

• 14:57 Association swimming: Hacking your muscle memory

• 16:29 Final thoughts and finding your flow state


Resources & Support:

⮕ 📖 Read the full guide: https://360swim.com/blog/wetronome-metronome-for-swimmers

⮕ 🦺 Train safe with the right gear: https://shop.360swim.com

⮕ ❤️ Support the podcast: https://360swim.com/donate or send sats via ⚡ swmtr@getalby.com


Disclaimer: Open water swimming carries inherent risks. Always swim within your limits, never swim alone, and always use a high-visibility safe swim buoy.

No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.