markz
100 TW
High power needs steel i.m.o. especially if you are going fast! Anything else, then Alum is fine. I would not touch carbon with a 100 foot pole t.b.h.
markz said:High power needs steel i.m.o. especially if you are going fast! Anything else, then Alum is fine. I would not touch carbon with a 100 foot pole t.b.h.
markz said:[...]have you ever found any info on tube wall thickness of various bicycles whether steel or alum?
Buk___ said:Take a look; then choose wisely![]()
Chalo said:Buk___ said:Take a look; then choose wisely![]()
That's pretty cool.
The aluminum tube they used had the same dimensions as the first two steel ones, which means it weighed 1/3 as much. I think if the aluminum one had been matched by mass rather than dimensions, it might have fared better than the steel samples.
And of course, if the carbon composite sample was made to the same mass, it would come out somewhat better too.
Chalo said:Because a tube's stiffness varies as the cube of its diameter (actually, the fourth power of its outer diameter divided by its inner diameter), the stiffness break-even point given the same wall thickness as steel is at 1.4 times the tube diameter. At that size, the aluminum tube weighs less than half what the steel tube does.
So then you can double the wall thickness and get double the stiffness, along with superior strength (because the total tensile yield strength is now about equal to chromoly but the sectional properties are better), and still come in a little lighter than the steel tube.
Chalo said:Aluminum bike frames have the reputation of being really stiff, but it's not because aluminum is stiff-- it's three times more flexible than steel, just like it's three times lighter. But that low density lets you scale up the size of everything and disproportionately benefit from larger dimensions.
Aluminum is really good at this stuff. That's why we make flying machines out of it. That's why bike manufacturers can make all sorts of retarded bullshit (like curved tube frames) and it still works out. Aluminum is just a lot fussier to work with than steel, if you need the strength that comes only through heat treatment.
Buk___ said:But then you could increase the diameter of your steel tube and reduce its thickness to 71% for increased stiffness from the same weight.
Chalo said:Buk___ said:But then you could increase the diameter of your steel tube and reduce its thickness to 71% for increased stiffness from the same weight.
Yes, but no. At 50:1 or so diameter to wall thickness ratio, tubes become vulnerable to "beer can" crumpling failures. This is what limits the practical oversizing of steel tubes (or any tubes). Manufacturers push the limits, but that gives us the vulnerabilities of lightweight steel frames as we already know them.
Buk___ said:Take a look; then choose wisely![]()
Buk___ said:Take a look; then choose wisely![]()
Yes it can, but it is very time consuming and expansive to do it at home. Due to costly development and manufacturing processes, suitable CF frames to build a powerful ebike are expansive and not so common. Most of us are conscious that CF has a great potential, but choose to build on other suitable frames that can be found and mod at lesser expanse.12-C said:Carbon can be engineered to...
MadRhino said:Yes it can, but it is very time consuming and expansive to do it at home. Due to costly development and manufacturing processes, suitable CF frames to build a powerful ebike are expansive and not so common. Most of us are conscious that CF has a great potential, but choose to build on other suitable frames that can be found and mod at lesser expanse.12-C said:Carbon can be engineered to...
markz said:Interesting read
http://www.sheldonbrown.com/chicago-schwinns.html