Yep this is exactly where my tilt stops. From zero and a straight line up to 1000' for the 1.5hr rides I did on Monday, Tues. Wed after I did the tape the tilt line stopped at 800' and I am talking a straight line, not like the one in the manual.
Hmmm. I'm not convinced the upward tilt slope has much to do if anything with the movement of the iBike within the mount. It seems to me that if it moved slightly, that would make for only slight errors on rougher roads. I've been riding silky smooth roads for the most part and still have the same upward tilt. Besides, I used to have a downward tilt from me leaning on the handlebars and now the opposite happens without having made any changes.
My question is if I am riding basically flatlands, shouldn't I expect my tilt to be flat like the after picture. Or does everyone's tilt all start at zero and straight line upwards and ours works just fine?
Not really. Everyone's tilt starts at zero and ideally would stay close to zero (perfect world). You could climb 10% for 30 minutes and if everything were perfect, the tilt slope line would be zero, IOW no error was introduced. I'm not at my computer but I just looked at the manual on page 38 and that illustration and the resulting wattage drop is excessive.
What I need to do after above, but will hold off due to heavy winds is new CDs/4mil. So until the winds die down around here, I will stick with current CDs.
Winds have settled down here so I'm going to do a set of coastdowns of Saturday if all goes well. However, I have a feeling that the problem is deeper than that.
Edited 03/27/2008 at 18:50 PDT
I just downloaded two rides that I completed today. The difference is that I received a new firmware update. The upward tilt slope was greatly reduced to only about 175 ft for an 18 mile ride. This made the power numbers after correction pretty much on the money. I am still going to do a new set of coastdowns and try to get back to where I was with a slope effect less than 100 for a normal ride. I'll post results.