Vekta Volume & Intensity

Edited

1. Why We Needed Something Better

You and your teammate both finish the day with the exact same TSS®.
You spent 4 hours in steady endurance; they rode 2.5 hours with sharp intervals.

According to TSS®, those rides were identical in training load.
Physiologically, they aren’t.

The problem? Most traditional load metrics, such as Training Stress Score® (TSS®), are built on models from over 20 years ago. While groundbreaking at the time, they now oversimplify how we quantify training demands.

That gap matters. When the numbers don’t tell the full story, you risk:

  • Plateauing because the true stimulus wasn’t enough

  • Burning out because hidden stress wasn’t accounted for

  • Mis-timing your peak because your periodisation was built on incomplete data

Vekta’s Volume and Intensity change this. They’re two distinct, complementary metrics designed to describe a training session completely. Together, they deliver the clarity you need to train smarter, recover better, and reach peak performance at the right time.

2. The Problem with Current Load Tracking

Most legacy systems give you one score for a session. That single number blends “how much” you did with “how hard” you did it, without distinguishing between them.

Imagine these two sessions:

  1. 5 hours steady endurance

  2. 2 hours with repeated VO2max intervals

Both could produce a similar TSS, yet their physiological demands and recovery needs are entirely different.

Recent sports science has shown why this is a problem:

  • Intensity isn’t linear: efforts above Critical Power (CP) cause a disproportionately higher strain.

  • Environment matters: altitude, heat, and even hydration status can make the same absolute power output harder to sustain.

  • Fatigue is cumulative: back-to-back high-intensity intervals carry more cost than the same efforts spaced apart.

Without separating Volume and Intensity, planning and periodisation remain educated guesswork.

3. The Vekta Solution: Two Lenses on the Same Session

At Vekta, we rethought load tracking from the ground up, aligning it with the latest research and practical coaching needs.

  • Vekta Volume = Total session demand → a macro view of how much work you’ve done.

  • Vekta Intensity = Effort difficulty, regardless of duration → a micro view of how hard it felt.

Think of them like distance and gradient. Distance tells you how far you’ve gone, and gradient tells you how steep it was. One without the other gives an incomplete picture.

4. Vekta Volume: Measuring the Total Demand

Definition: Volume represents the total energy produced during a session, adjusted for the rate of production.

Core Principles

  • Weight-normalized: Increases fairness across body sizes. 200W for 60kg is not the same as 200W for 80kg.

  • Unlimited scale: The more you do, the higher the score.

Data Needed

  • Power data from the session

  • Athlete’s body weight

  • Session duration

Duration required to reach a 100 Vekta Volume score

5. Vekta Intensity: Measuring the Difficulty

Definition: Intensity captures how hard a session was, regardless of how long it lasted. It’s calculated continuously throughout the ride as “local intensity” and then aggregated.

Core Principles

  • Above-CP weighting: Efforts above CP are disproportionately more costly, based on recent physiological models.

  • Athlete-specific scaling: based on CP, W′, and Pmax, so both a sprinter and a time trialist have fair scales, as do beginners and pros.

  • Cumulative fatigue: Repeated and prolonged intervals amplify local intensity.

  • Environmental adjustment: 300W at 2,000m altitude feels harder and scores higher than at sea level.

  • Standardized range: Always between 0 and 100 for comparability.

Examples

  • 2h with 3 x 10 x 30/15 at VO2max → ~75 Intensity

  • 3h with 2x20min at Threshold → ~50 Intensity

6. How Volume & Intensity Work Together

One number tells part of the story. Both together tell the whole story.

Volume

Intensity

Likely Session Type

Low

Low

Recovery / Coffee ride

High

Low

Long endurance

Low

High

Short high-intensity

High

High

Race conditions

8. How to Use Vekta in Your Training

  • Weekly planning: Track cumulative Volume using Vekta Load; use Intensity to ensure variety.

  • Periodisation:

    • High-V weeks for aerobic base

    • High-I days for race-specific sharpening

  • Recovery management: A High V + High I day signals the need for extra recovery.

  • Race analysis: Identify if fatigue came from total load or extreme moments of intensity.

The Bottom Line

Training load is complex, but traditional metrics often reduce it to a single, oversimplified number. That approach hides important details. Details that matter for performance, adaptation, and recovery.

Vekta Volume and Intensity bridge that gap. By separating how much work you do from how hard it is for you, we give athletes and coaches a clearer, more granular view of each session. This allows for more informed planning, better periodisation, and smarter decisions grounded in the latest sports science.

We’re not replacing existing tools. We’re enhancing them, so your data reflects the true demands of your training.


Further Reading

  • Leo, Peter & Spragg, James & Wakefield, John. (2022). The Compound Score in elite road cycling.


Training Stress Score® (TSS®) is a registered trademark owned by TrainingPeaks, LLC.

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