NewTraining Science

Muscular Endurance Self-Test

Five field tests that tell you whether your legs are ready for an 8 to 14 hour mountain day. No lab, no coach, 90 minutes total. Setup, protocol, and the score you should be hitting before summit day.

Jakob Ulcnik
By Jakob Ulcnik, Founder of Train to Mountain
The short answer

Five field tests, 90 minutes total, no lab or coach. They tell you whether your legs are ready for an 8 to 14 hour mountain day. If you fail one, you get exact diagnostic information about what to train next. Redo them every 6 to 8 weeks to track progress.

Why these tests, and what they each measure

A mountain day stresses your legs in five distinct ways: sustained concentric work going up, sustained submax aerobic-local work on long ascents, single-leg control on uneven terrain, eccentric braking on the way down, and accumulated time-under-tension on long descents. Generic fitness tests miss most of these. The five tests below were chosen so that each one isolates one of those qualities, and a passing score across all five lines up with what people who summit comfortably tend to look like.

None of these are TTM-invented. They are field tests drawn from sports science and the mountaineering training literature, packaged into one 90-minute protocol so you do not have to assemble it yourself. The pillar guide on muscular endurance for mountaineering covers the physiology behind why each one matters.

If you are a Train to Mountain user

Your in-app Calibration Week (your first week with TTM) includes a shorter field test that feeds your plan automatically. The 5-test protocol below is for athletes who want to self-assess before signing up, or who train outside TTM. The diagnostic logic is the same: ascent capacity, aerobic-local integration, single-leg control, eccentric strength, descent tolerance. The in-app version is shorter and live-fed into your plan; this version is more granular and self-directed. Both work.

What you need before you start

Run the tests in order, with 5 to 10 minutes rest between each. Take the whole protocol on a low-fatigue day, ideally after 48 hours of light training, and write down every score so you can compare against the next round.

Test 1: Weighted Step-Up Cadence

What it measures: sustained concentric muscular endurance of the quads, glutes, and calves under load. The most uphill-specific of the five.

Protocol: 10 kg (22 lb) pack on. Step up onto your 40 to 50 cm (16 to 20 inch) step at a steady cadence of 20 steps per minute (one full up-down every 3 seconds). Alternate the lead leg every 10 steps. Keep the cadence honest using a metronome or counting under your breath. Score is total minutes of continuous stepping before form breaks down (toe-out, knee collapse inward, audible breathing collapse) or you stop.

Test 1 Scoring

Weighted step-up cadence

Test 2: Sustained Loaded Carry

What it measures: low-intensity muscular endurance with aerobic integration, the dominant demand on long approach days and trekking peaks.

Protocol: 10 kg (22 lb) pack on. Walk at a sustainable pace on flat terrain for 60 minutes. Heart rate stays in Zone 2 (about 65 to 75 percent of max heart rate, or comfortable conversation pace). Rate your perceived effort on a 1 to 10 scale at minute 10 and minute 60. Score is the drift between those two readings.

Test 2 Scoring

Loaded carry perceived effort drift

Test 3: Zone 2 Stairmaster Block

What it measures: sustained submaximal aerobic-local capacity in the climbing pattern itself. The most ascent-specific aerobic-local test.

Protocol: Stairmaster (no pack). Set the resistance to a level that puts you at the lower end of Zone 2 within the first 2 minutes (about 65 to 75 percent of max heart rate, or comfortable conversation pace). Hold that effort for 45 minutes. The machine speed will need to come down as the work accumulates. That is fine and expected. Score is your average steps per minute over the final 5 minutes minus your average over the first 5 minutes, expressed as a percentage drop.

Test 3 Scoring

Zone 2 Stairmaster step-rate decay

Test 4: Single-Leg Eccentric Step-Down

What it measures: single-leg control and eccentric quad capacity, the most predictive of descent injury risk and knee comfort.

Protocol: Stand on your step on one leg, the other leg held in front. Lower the unloaded foot to the floor over a slow 4-second count. No momentum, no knee collapse inward, no torso tilt. Heel taps the floor lightly, then return up. Score is total clean reps per leg before form breaks down, the knee tracks inward, or you cannot hold the 4-second descent. Test each leg separately and record both.

Test 4 Scoring

Single-leg eccentric step-down (reps per leg)

Test 5: Downhill Walking Time Under Tension

What it measures: eccentric capacity under sustained real-terrain load. The most descent-specific of the five and the one most plans neglect.

Protocol: Find a sustained descent of 200 to 300m (660 to 980 ft) of elevation loss. A long downhill street, a parking ramp, or a stair descent with a loaded pack all work as urban substitutes. Walk down at controlled pace, no jogging. Score is total descent in metres before quad burning forces you to slow, stop, or change pace. Redo the test 7 days later. The second-attempt score should be measurably better if the repeated bout effect (Lieber and Friden, 1993) is doing its work.

Test 5 Scoring

Descent time-under-tension (metres before forced slowdown)

Interpreting the full panel

A single failed test gives you exact diagnostic information. The pattern across all five gives you the prescription:

How TTM tracks the same qualities

Same diagnostic logic, different inputs

Train to Mountain does not ingest the 5-test scores from this protocol directly today. What TTM does instead, every time you train, is track the eccentric portion of every logged session via the Eccentric Load Index, enforce phase-specific eccentric dose minimums via the Eccentric Balance Guard, and require a minimum descent exposure count in the final 8 weeks before your peak. Together those mechanisms cover the same diagnostic ground as Tests 4 and 5 above, but through ongoing in-app data rather than a single test day.

The in-app Sunday field test at the end of Calibration Week covers the rest, and the plan recalibrates every Sunday around what you actually trained. Direct ingestion of self-test scores from this protocol is on the roadmap as an optional onboarding input.

A faster, peak-aware option

If 90 minutes of testing is more than you want to commit, the Muscular Endurance Calculator takes a shorter input set plus your goal peak and returns a peak-matched readiness score with the specific gap to close. The calculator is faster but less granular than the full 5-test protocol. Both work. Use the calculator first to know if you need the full panel.

The takeaway

Most climbers cannot tell you whether their legs are ready for a long mountain day. After 90 minutes of testing, you can. Run the protocol, write the scores down, identify the limiter, and train the limiter. Re-test in 6 to 8 weeks. The protocol pays for itself the first time it prevents you from arriving at summit day with descent-naive legs.

Common questions

How do I test my muscular endurance for mountaineering at home?

Five field tests give a reliable read on your muscular endurance for a mountain day: a weighted step-up cadence test at 10 kg (22 lb), a 60-minute sustained loaded carry, a 45-minute Zone 2 Stairmaster block, single-leg eccentric step-downs to form failure, and a downhill walking time-under-tension test on real terrain. The whole protocol takes about 90 minutes and you redo it every 6 to 8 weeks to track progress. No lab or coach required.

What is a good muscular endurance score for an 8-hour mountain day?

Useful benchmarks for an 8-hour single-day alpine ascent at 3,000 to 4,500m (9,800 to 14,800 ft): 30 minutes or more of continuous weighted step-ups at 20 reps per minute with 10 kg (22 lb), a 60-minute loaded carry with under 2 points of perceived-effort drift, less than 5 percent Stairmaster step-rate drop across 45 minutes, 15 or more controlled single-leg eccentric step-downs per leg, and a 300m (980 ft) descent without quad-burning forced stops. Anything below those thresholds means you have a base to convert from but need a 4 to 6 week conversion phase before summit day.

How often should I retest my muscular endurance?

Every 6 to 8 weeks during a training build. That is long enough to see measurable adaptation, short enough to catch a plateau before it costs you weeks. Test on a low-fatigue day, ideally after 48 hours of light training, and redo the tests in the same order with the same gear so the comparison is honest.

Why does the descent walking test matter more than the step-up test?

Because most muscular endurance failure on real mountain days happens on the way down, not the way up. Eccentric contractions (the muscle lengthening under load) damage muscle fibres at much higher rates than concentric contractions at the same force (Proske and Morgan, 2001). The step-up test reads your concentric capacity, the descent test reads your eccentric capacity, and the second one is the one most plans neglect. A climber who scores well on uphill tests and badly on the descent test is the most common pattern, and the easiest to fix.

Can I do these tests if I have no access to mountains?

Four of the five tests work anywhere: weighted step-up, sustained loaded carry, Stairmaster, and single-leg eccentric step-down all run in an urban environment. The fifth, the downhill walking test, needs a sustained descent of 200 to 300m (660 to 980 ft). Substitutes that work for urban athletes: a long downhill street, a parking ramp, or a stair descent with a loaded pack. The substitutes are less specific than real terrain but capture the same eccentric load demand.

What do I do if I fail one of the tests?

Failing one test gives you exact diagnostic information: the specific quality you need to train next. A poor step-up test means concentric muscular endurance is the limiter. A poor descent test means eccentric capacity is the limiter. A poor Stairmaster test means aerobic-local endurance integration is the limiter. The strength-to-endurance conversion guide breaks down the protocol for each, and the Train to Mountain plan-builder will programme the right work for you automatically based on what you log.

Tested honest, now train the limiter.

TTM takes your self-test scores plus your goal peak and builds the plan around what is actually missing. Strength base, conversion phase, descent-specific eccentric work, all sequenced and recalibrated every Sunday.

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