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1987

1987

The first PowerMeter

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1988

1988

The first SRM Training System

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1989

1989

The Inside of the PowerMeter

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1991

1991

Trainingcamp of the German Nationalteam in St. Moritz/Switzerland

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1991

1991

The Third Generation of the SRM PowerMeter and the PowerControl II

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1992

1992

Claudio Ciapucchi - aerodynamik tests on the track

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1993

1993

Greg Lemond is riding the SRM System in the Tour de France

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1993

1993

4th generation of the SRM PowerMeter and the PowerControl IV

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1995

1995

Ned Overend is riding with the first generation of the MTB PowerMeter

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1996

1996

Track testing with the German Nationalteam in cooperation with FES

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1996

1996

Tony Rominger preparing for the Hour Record

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1997

1997

Bjarne Riis wins Liege-Bastogne-Liege with an SRM Training System

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1998

1998

Franco Ballerini (†) and Aldo Sassi while testing in the Mapei-Center

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1999

1999

Start of construction of the SRM headquarter in Jülich/Germany

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1999

1999

The 5th generation of the SRM PowerMeter and the PowerControl IV

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1999

1999

Erik Zabel testing on the track

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2000

2000

Tour of Germany - the telemetry cockpit on Uli Schoberer's BMW motorbike

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2000

2000

Ralf and Bert Grabsch training on the Ergometer at the SRM headquarters in Jülich/Germany

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2001

2001

Marco Pantani (†)

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2003

2003

Lance Armstrong is riding with the SRM Training System in a time trial

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2003

2003

Robbie McEwen on the SRM-Ergometer

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2004

2004

Telemetry at the Tour de France 2004

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2004

2004

The US Women's National Team visiting the SRM headquarters in Jülich/Germany

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2005

2005

Damiano Cunego testing on the track in Büttgen/Germany

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Our story of success:

Setting the gold standard in sports power measurement


armstgclimb.jpgSRM - Schoberer Rad Messtechnik - was founded by engineer Ulrich Schoberer in 1986. Prior to this the qualified medical engineer had spent many years thinking up and experimenting with ways to measure an athlete's power output on the pedals under real conditions during an actual ride.

Up until the eighties, no adequate method had been found to measure performance on a bike in training or racing, you still had to rely on lab testing instead. This meant that athletes were forced to go back and forth between their real performance - cycling on the road or cross country - and the ergometer in the lab. With lab testing, they still couldn't tell how their performance had changed over a period of a few hours, either in a race or in training. Lab testing was an intermittent check-up, at best, but couldn't tell athletes anything about how they were performing day-to-day. And the most important performance - during competition - couldn't be tested.

It wasn‘t until Ulrich Schoberer developed and patented the SRM Training System that it at last became possible to measure power in watts while cycling. SRMs measure the only aspect of training that is absolute, POWER, which isn't affected by the kinds of influences, like weather conditions (temperature, wind) you see when you measure physiological variables such as heart rate or speed. Even better, pedalling power is measured at the point where output really occurs, on the special crank, the SRM Powermeter.

The development of the SRM systems began in 1986, and since then their further development has benefited from the ideas and experience of important sport scientists, coaches, trainers and professional cyclists from Italy, Great Britain, the USA and Germany.

Today the SRM Training System has become standard equipment for the world's leading professionals in cycling and triathlon such as Lance Armstrong, Greg Lemond, Mario Cippolini, Paolo Bettini, Erik Zabel, Nicole Cooke, Kristin Armstrong, Amber Neben, Sabine Spitz, Mark Cavendish, Bert Grabsch, Normann Stadler and many others, for national teams, sport universities, coaches and all recreational athletes who take training seriously. For years now they have being using the SRM Training System as a reliable and indispensable training instrument in cycling, and now professional athletes from other sports, such as NHL hockey players, cross-country skiers and Formula One drivers have started using them as well.

The principle has stood the test of time for 20 years, and under every condition imaginable; SRMs were even used on board the MIR space station under conditions of zero gravity.

To meet the ever increasing demand from the field of professionals, serious amateurs, and hobby athletes - the SRM Training System is now available in any number of different versions. Whether on the road, cross country or on the track, our SRM engineers have developed efficient and specific solutions for every area.

The components that are used to build the SRM Training System are chosen because they are the best ones to do the job, and this is where our reputation for high quality comes from; the kind of quality that people have come to expect from German engineering.

Each system is custom made: different crank types (for example Shimano, FSA, Cannondale, Specialized etc), crank length, chain ring size, color of decal or PowerControl.

In the meantime word of the high-quality results achieved with the SRM Training System has spread outside the cycling scene: today sailing teams crank on special constructions to determine how many watts they must fill the sails with to keep ahead in the next ocean race, athletes in wheelchairs measure their performance, there are handbikes and even solutions for trotting races. And this is surely just the beginning of the many new ideas emerging from the SRM stable!