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==The Answer, Part 1==
The study showed how finish time changes with temperature, and the results are shown in the following graph.
This graph works well for runners finishing the race at 3 hour pace or faster, but that excludes the majority of marathon runners. How can we extend this to slower runners?
==The Answer(s), Part 2==
==Your Mileage May Vary==
There are a lot of flaws in this approach, which you should be aware of.
* Extrapolating information is a flawed approach, as there is no way of knowing what the actual data would look like.
==Usability of the data==
Given all these problems, is this approach usable or useful? I think believe there is some use, value as long as you understand the limitationsof the approach. If the charts below say you can run a 4:48 marathon based on your cool weather performance and the projected temperature, this does not mean you can run a 4:48 in practice. What it does provide is a sense of just how much you will need to slow down on a hot day, and how important weather is in your results. Hopefully this information will cause allow you to reset your goals and promote a flexible approach on race day.
==Marathon Selection==
One key note from this analysis is that weather will play a huge role in your results. If you are seeking a race to achieve a specific time goal, such as Boston Qualification, choosing a race that has a high probability of cool or cold weather becomes important. You are probably better off with a hillier course than warm weather for instance.
==Zero Origin TableProjected Performance=={| {{table}}| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|Use the 'heat index'or '40f'''| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''50f'''| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''60f'''| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''70f''feels like'temperatures rather than raw thermometer readings in the table below. (The [[Perceived Temperature For Runners]] is quite different and should not be used here!) You can also get temperature adjustment via the [[VDOT Calculator]]. {| align="center" styleclass="background:#f0f0f0;wikitable"|'''80f'''|-| 3:00:00||3:05:24 (3%)||3:10:48 (6%)||3:16:12 (9%)||3:21:36 (12%)|-| 3:05:00||3:10:42 (3%)||3:16:25 (6%)||3:22:07 (9%)||3:27:49 (12%)|-| 3:10:00||3:16:01 (3%)||3:22:02 (6%)||3:28:03 (10%)||3:34:04 (13%)|-| 3:15:00||3:21:20 (3%)||3:27:40 (7%)||3:34:01 (10%)||3:40:21 (13%)|-| 3:20:00||3:26:40 (3%)||3:33:20 (7%)||3:40:00 (10%)||3:46:40 (13%)|-| 3:25:00||3:32:00 (3%)||3:39:00 (7%)||3:46:01 (10%)||3:53:01 (14%)|-| 3:30:00||3:37:21 (4%)||3:44:42 (7%)||3:52:03 (11%)||3:59:24 (14%)|-| 3:35:00||3:42:42 (4%)||3:50:25 (7%)||3:58:07 (11%)||4:05:49 (14%)|-| 3:40:00||3:48:04 (4%)||3:56:08 (7%)||4:04:12 (11%)||4:12:16 (15%)|-| 3:45:00||3:53:26 (4%)||4:01:52 (8%)||4:10:19 (11%)||4:18:45 (15%)|-| 3:50:00||3:58:49 (4%)||4:07:38 (8%)||4:16:27 (12%)||4:25:16 (15%)|-| 3:55:00||4:04:12 (4%)||4:13:24 (8%)||4:22:37 (12%)||4:31:49 (16%)|-| 4:00:00||4:09:36 (4%)||4:19:12 (8%)||4:28:48 (12%)||4:38:24 (16%)|-| 4:05:00||4:15:00 (4%)||4:25:00 (8%)||4:35:01 (12%)||4:45:01 (16%)|-| 4:10:00||4:20:25 (4%)||4:30:50 (8%)||4:41:15 (13%)||4:51:40 (17%)|-| 4:15:00||4:25:50 (4%)||4:36:40 (9%)||4:47:31 (13%)||4:58:21 (17%)|-| 4:20:00||4:31:16 (4%)||4:42:32 (9%)||4:53:48 (13%)||5:05:04 (17%)|-| 4:25:00||4:36:42 (4%)||4:48:24 (9%)||5:00:07 (13%)||5:11:49 (18%)|-| 4:30:00||4:42:09 (5%)||4:54:18 (9%)||5:06:27 (14%)||5:18:36 (18%)|-| 4:35:00||4:47:36 (5%)||5:00:12 (9%)||5:12:49 (14%)||5:25:25 (18%)|-| 4:40:00||4:53:04 (5%)||5:06:08 (9%)||5:19:12 (14%)||5:32:16 (19%)|-| 4:45:00||4:58:32 (5%)||5:12:04 (10%)||5:25:37 (14%)||5:39:09 (19%)|-| 4:50:00||5:04:01 (5%)||5:18:02 (10%)||5:32:03 (15%)||5:46:04 (19%)|-| 4:55:00||5:09:30 (5%)||5:24:00 (10%)||5:38:31 (15%)||5:53:01 (20%)|-| 5:00:00||5:15:00 (5%)||5:30:00 (10%)||5:45:00 (15%)||6:00:00 (20%)|-| 5:05:00||5:20:30 (5%)||5:36:00 (10%)||5:51:31 (15%)||6:07:01 (20%)|-| 5:10:00||5:26:01 (5%)||5:42:02 (10%)||5:58:03 (16%)||6:14:04 (21%)|-| 5:15:00||5:31:32 (5%)||5:48:04 (11%)||6:04:37 (16%)||6:21:09 (21%)|-| 5:20:00||5:37:04 (5%)||5:54:08 (11%)||6:11:12 (16%)||6:28:16 (21%)|-| 5:25:00||5:42:36 (5%)||6:00:12 (11%)||6:17:49 (16%)||6:35:25 (22%)|-| 5:30:00||5:48:09 (6%)||6:06:18 (11%)||6:24:27 (17%)||6:42:36 (22%)|-| 5:35:00||5:53:42 (6%)||6:12:24 (11%)||6:31:07 (17%)||6:49:49 (22%)|-| 5:40:00||5:59:16 (6%)||6:18:32 (11%)||6:37:48 (17%)||6:57:04 (23%)|-| 5:45:00||6:04:50 (6%)||6:24:40 (12%)||6:44:31 (17%)||7:04:21 (23%)|-| 5:50:00||6:10:25 (6%)||6:30:50 (12%)||6:51:15 (18%)||7:11:40 (23%)|-| 5:55:00||6:16:00 (6%)||6:37:00 (12%)||6:58:01 (18%)||7:19:01 (24%)|-| 6:00:00||6:21:36 (6%)||6:43:12 (12%)||7:04:48 (18%)||7:26:24 (24%)|} ==110 Offset Table=={| {{table}}
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''40f'''
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''50f'''
| 6:00:00||6:21:36 (11%)||6:43:12 (21%)||7:04:48 (32%)||7:26:24 (43%)
|}
Example usage: You expect to run a 4:20 in 40 degree weather, but it’s going to be 70. Looking across the 4:20 line to the 70 degree column you find 4:53, which is a 19% reduction in performance.
==The Details==
The study looked at 140 marathon results from 6 races (Boston, New York, Twin Cities, Grandma's, Richmond, Hartford, and Vancouver). Only the first 300 finish times were used as races only started recording all finishers in the 1990s. This gives a pool of 42,000 finish times. The races were divided up into four groups
==See Also==
* Running calculators
** [[Running Heat Model]]
** [[Perceived Temperature For Runners]]
** [[Heat limited running pace]]
** [[Optimum Running Temperature]]
* [[Heat Acclimation Training]]
* [[Cramps]]
* [[Excel Macros for pace]] (That's how the table above was created)
* [[Running in the Heat]]
* [[Heat Acclimation Training]]
==References==
<references>