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RaceFuel Planner

Anyone training for an event thinks about the training plan, equipment and route. Nutrition often comes last - and in the worst-case scenario can cost you the race. This planner shows you how much energy you need per hour, how to get it in the cheapest and most stomach-friendly way - and why you shouldn't wait until the 50th kilometer.

Your personal supply plan

Enter your data and calculate how much Malto you need for your ride - and what it really costs you compared to gels and ready-made powders.

Inputs

75 kg
3 h
W

FTP (Functional Threshold Power) is the power in watts that you can maintain for approximately one hour. It is the basis for precise training and supply planning. Unknown? No problem - we estimate automatically.

Moderate - long training day

3

Strategy

Only Malto - simple, affordable, robust. Ideal for training and long tours.

Your supply plan

Malto total

Per hour

Bottles

Per bottle

Concentration

Calculated power

Your Fuel Plan - powered by DunMove

When do you eat and drink what - hour by hour.

Start calculation to see results.

What is maltodextrin - and why do we simply call it malto?

Maltodextrin is a tasteless carbohydrate powder obtained from starch. It dissolves easily in water, hardly burdens the stomach and provides the body with quickly available energy during sport. No taste, no additives - just carbohydrates. For the sake of simplicity, we'll just call it Malto from here on in.

Malto is not new - professionals and ultra-athletes have been using it for years. Inexpensive, effective, easy on the stomach. The planner below shows you exactly how to use it.

Malto in sport - honestly rated

Advantages

  • +Quickly available - no digestion required, directly into the bloodstream
  • +Stomach-friendly at high intensity - no solid food in the stomach at 300W
  • +No taste - after hour 4 you don't want any more fruit flavor
  • +Reproducible and measurable - you know exactly how many grams of carbohydrates per bottle, no guesswork
  • +Easy to dose - always the same concentration, always the same effect
  • +Inexpensive - dramatically cheaper than gels or ready-made powders

Disadvantages

  • No real food - psychologically this can be difficult on long rides
  • Needs preparation - you have to mix it, not just tear it open
  • No electrolyte balance - you need to keep an eye on salt and minerals separately

Why you need to fuel up early

Your body stores carbohydrates as glycogen - in muscles and liver together roughly ~1,500-2,500 kcal. How quickly this is used up depends heavily on the intensity. At an easy pace, fat burning works well - you can often ride for the first 60-90 minutes without any intake. At medium intensity, glycogen is burned much faster, and at race pace it is literally eaten up. The aim is not to refill the empty tank - but to prevent it from running empty in the first place. If you start eating too late, you have a deficit that can no longer be made up.

Moderate - 200 W = 67% FTP (FTP 300 W)

~4,4 h

~45% carbohydrates → 360 kcal/h from glycogen. 1,600 kcal ÷ 360 = 4.4 h

At the threshold - 200 W = 100% FTP (FTP 200 W)

~2,0 h

~100% carbohydrates → 800 kcal/h from glycogen. 1,600 kcal ÷ 800 = 2.0 h

A deficit cannot be made up. If you only start eating after 2 hours, you have burned 2 hours of glycogen that will never come back. Full stores before the start, intake from minute 1 - whether Malto, gel or powder. The decisive factor is the quantity.