An analysis of CrossFit Games athletes' training data published by Butcher et al. (2015) found that top competitors averaged 12–16 hours of structured training per week, with approximately 60% of volume logged at low aerobic intensities — what exercise physiologists call Zone 2. Yet recreational CrossFitters, eager to replicate elite results, spend most of their time in high-intensity WODs, chronically suppressing the aerobic adaptations that make those WODs sustainable. Engine building is the deliberate construction of aerobic and alactic power capacity through polarised programming — and it is what separates athletes who peak at regionals from those who flatten out mid-season.
What Is the CrossFit Engine?
In CrossFit vernacular, the engine refers to the combined capacity of three energy systems to sustain work:
- Phosphocreatine (ATP-PCr) system: Dominant in efforts 1–10 seconds. Powers bar muscle-ups, heavy snatches, max-effort sprints. Improved by heavy strength training and short rest intervals, not cardio.
- Glycolytic system: Dominant in 10-second to 2-minute efforts. The system taxed by most WODs. Adapted via repeated sprint intervals and threshold work.
- Oxidative system: Dominant beyond 2 minutes. Determines how quickly the other two systems recover between efforts, and how efficiently fat substrate is used to spare glycogen during long WODs.
A weak aerobic engine means the glycolytic system must sustain work it is not designed for, producing lactate faster than it can be cleared and forcing athletes to slow down or break sets prematurely. Paradoxically, building the oxidative system through low-intensity work unlocks higher glycolytic capacity by improving lactate clearance rate.
Physiology of Engine Building
Zone 2 training — work at 65–75% of maximum heart rate, or below the first ventilatory threshold — drives mitochondrial biogenesis through PGC-1α upregulation. Lundby & Jacobs (2016) demonstrated that 8–10 weeks of Zone 2 training in recreationally active adults increased skeletal muscle mitochondrial content by 20–30%, with corresponding improvements in fat oxidation rate at submaximal intensities. In CrossFit terms, this means maintaining faster average paces across long AMRAPs without redlining.
A second physiological target is maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max). Seiler (2010) systematically reviewed elite endurance athletes and found that polarised training — 75–80% low intensity, 5–10% moderate, 15–20% high intensity — consistently outperformed threshold-focused approaches for VO2max and performance outcomes. CrossFit's modality diversity makes polarised programming natural: low-intensity rowing and cycling for volume, short track sprints and max-effort intervals for the high end.
Training Zone Distribution
For a CrossFit athlete in an off-season engine block, the following weekly zone distribution is evidence-supported:
| Zone | %HRmax | Perceived Exertion (RPE) | Weekly % Volume | Primary Adaptation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zone 1 (Active Recovery) | <60% | 1–3 | 10–15% | Recovery enhancement |
| Zone 2 (Low Aerobic) | 65–75% | 3–5 | 55–65% | Mitochondrial biogenesis |
| Zone 3 (Threshold) | 76–85% | 6–7 | 5–10% | Lactate clearance |
| Zone 4–5 (High Intensity) | 86–100% | 8–10 | 15–20% | VO2max, power at maximal effort |
Most recreational CrossFitters unwittingly spend 50–60% of training in Zone 3 — the so-called grey zone that is simultaneously too hard to drive mitochondrial volume and too easy to produce genuine high-intensity adaptations. Shifting that volume to Zone 2 (harder to sustain but not painful) produces superior long-term aerobic development.
12-Week Program Structure
The following 12-week block integrates engine building with continued strength and skill work:
| Phase | Weeks | Aerobic Volume | WOD Structure | Strength Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base Building | 1–4 | 4–5 Zone 2 sessions, 20–40 min each | 2–3 WODs/week, capped at Zone 3 | 3× strength, lower intensity |
| Aerobic Development | 5–8 | 4 Zone 2 sessions + 1 threshold session | 3 WODs/week, 1 high-intensity interval day | 3× strength, maintain loads |
| Power-Engine Integration | 9–11 | 3 Zone 2 sessions + 1 VO2max interval | 3–4 WODs/week, competition pace | 2× strength, peak loads |
| Deload / Test | 12 | 2 Zone 2 sessions (20 min each) | 2 benchmark WODs for testing | 1× strength, 60% volume |
Benchmark WODs for testing engine progress: 2000m Row (time trial), 5000m Assault Bike (calories in 20 min), and a 12-minute AMRAP at threshold effort. Compare pre- and post-block outputs to quantify aerobic gains.
Monostructural Modality Selection
CrossFit athletes have an advantage over pure endurance athletes: multiple non-impact Zone 2 modalities that allow daily aerobic training without overuse accumulation:
- Rowing (erg): Highest metabolic cost per unit time among standard CrossFit modalities. 500m split pace at Zone 2 ranges from 2:10–2:30 for most athletes. Fully non-impact; preserves legs for strength and WOD sessions.
- Assault Bike: Full-body demand; HR reaches Zone 2 quickly. Effective for athletes who find rowing technically challenging. Target 60–75% of maximum calorie/hour output.
- Run: Ground-reactive loading builds running economy but accumulates impact stress. Limit Zone 2 running to 2 sessions/week during heavy strength phases.
- Ski Erg: Predominantly upper-body; valuable as active recovery while maintaining cardiac output. Ideal as a Zone 1–2 session the day after a heavy leg day.
Power Output Tracking
Aerobic development is only visible through external power output — not heart rate alone. Heart rate at the same absolute power output decreases as fitness improves (cardiac drift suppression). This means a 250W row that puts an unfit athlete at 85% HRmax will put the same athlete at 74% HRmax after 8 weeks of Zone 2 training at the same wattage. HR alone cannot reveal this without paired power data.
Recommended tracking metrics per modality:
- Rowing: average 500m split at a fixed HR (e.g., 140 bpm). Improving split at same HR = aerobic development.
- Assault Bike: calories per minute at 70% HRmax. Track weekly and expect 8–15% improvement over 12 weeks of polarised training.
- Run: pace per km at 75% HRmax. The most meaningful outdoor aerobic fitness marker.
References
- Seiler, S. (2010). What is best practice for training intensity and duration distribution in endurance athletes? International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance, 5(3), 276–291.
- Lundby, C., & Jacobs, R.A. (2016). Adaptations of skeletal muscle mitochondria to exercise training. Experimental Physiology, 101(1), 17–22.
- Butcher, S.J., Neyedly, T.J., Horvey, K.J., & Benko, C.R. (2015). Do physiological measures predict selected CrossFit benchmark performance? Open Access Journal of Sports Medicine, 6, 241–247.
Integrating Strength Work
Engine building does not mean abandoning the barbell. Strength work remains in the program throughout the 12-week block, but structured to minimise interference with aerobic adaptations:
- Schedule strength sessions at least 6 hours apart from Zone 2 sessions, or on separate days where possible.
- Emphasise lower-body posterior chain (deadlift, hip thrust, box step) and pulling patterns — the demand structures of rowing, cleans, and wall balls that dominate CrossFit benchmark WODs.
- Maintain, do not build, during the aerobic base phase: 3 sets of 4–6 reps at 80–85% 1RM is sufficient to preserve strength without adding hypertrophic fatigue that would compromise aerobic session quality.
- Use bar velocity to manage strength session intensity. A CMJ-down day is not a heavy deadlift day; drop to 70% 1RM and treat it as a motor pattern maintenance session.
Frequently asked questions
01How much Zone 2 training is enough to build a CrossFit engine?+
02Won't too much Zone 2 training make me slower and less powerful?+
03What is the best heart rate monitor setup for Zone 2 CrossFit training?+
04Can I build my engine during CrossFit competition season?+
05How long does it take to see aerobic engine improvements?+
06Should I eat differently during an engine-building block?+
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