They don't make bikes cheap enough to be a good match for most of our legs thenThe late Ray Booty once told me with regard the cost of a bike. " Its no good having a £1.000 bike if you have only got a £100 pair of legs"
All this is theoretical reduction in strength.While Hambini is a competent engineer many of his videos are done for shock value admittedly but you can see the issues he is raising. Raoul at Luscher Technik is completely different, he is a huge fan of CF and has even made his own CF frames. He is an ex-Boeing CF engineer and he is very plain speaking with no obvious bias I can find and I pretty much trust completely what he states. When he is literally showing you the voids and issues in these frames how on earth can you doubt it? From what I've seen elsewhere such manufacturing issues reduce the stated load capacity of such frames so if you have a CF frame stated for riders up to 120kg but with serious manufacturing issues the real weight rating for that frame could be maybe 60-90kg because of the structural imperfections. That's just a random figure I have come up with but you get my point that structurally they are much weaker but still sufficient strength perhaps for the majority of cyclists who ride them. A compromised frame structurally doesn't mean immediate failure but obviously there is a huge safety implication especially for heavier riders.
The fact is you can have two identical CF bikes but one is significantly weaker than the other despite both being used to the same level. You can get that with aluminium and to a lesser extent steel if one frame has been used far more than the other with heavily fatigued tubes but not straight out of the showroom typically.
All this is theoretical reduction in strength.
Has he actually then tested samples of the frames with and without these voids or other issues to destruction, to find out what their actual strengths are?
Perhaps the stated 120kg weight limit is correct for the frames with issues, and the perfect ones could take 150Kg.
I would hope that the manufacturers build in reasonable margins in their stated weight limits, and would also hope they test those using standard frames, not ones which have been specially prepared. They don't want to be getting hundreds of claims for damages due to failed frames.
All this is theoretical reduction in strength.
Has he actually then tested samples of the frames with and without these voids or other issues to destruction, to find out what their actual strengths are?
Perhaps the stated 120kg weight limit is correct for the frames with issues, and the perfect ones could take 150Kg.
I would hope that the manufacturers build in reasonable margins in their stated weight limits, and would also hope they test those using standard frames, not ones which have been specially prepared. They don't want to be getting hundreds of claims for damages due to failed frames.
So where is the data on him testing them to destruction?I don't think its theoretical at all
So where is the data on him testing them to destruction?
Without that, it most certainly is theoretical.
But you didn't address what I said in the rest of that post at all. Those defects may well make the frames weaker. But "weaker" is a relative term. It may be (and IMO is very likely) that the "weaker" frames are in fact perfectly suitable for the average rider who weighs as much as the manufacturer stated limit.
You keep talking as if his data shows these frames to be not fit for purpose, when if that were the case, manufacturers would be facing unacceptable numbers of claims, and we would be hearing horror stories all the time about frames failing in normal use.
I think it's getting boring nowI think bonzo doesn't like carbon bikes![]()
1. You need to learn what the word "theory" means. You can be 99.999999% certain of what will happen, but until physically tested, it is "just" theory.The idea that its just theory that a poorly manufactured frame is more likely to fail is to be honest delusional.
I would be very surprised if manufacturers carefully select which frames get tested to use only the best ones. That would work out FAR more expensive in the long term.Cracks and voids are easy to understand that they reduce the strength of that material. Maybe one day someone will pay to have a poorly made CF frame and fork go through the certification process testing to see how it compares with a well made frame but I can't see where the money would come from to do those tests which could cost 10s of thousands of pounds. Certification testing isn't cheap.
You can get badly welded bikes made in sweat shops in the far east - made of steel and alluminium. Many are poorly made generally.
But, but, but I really need to tell everyone who doesn't agree with me that they're wrong...I suppose the answer is, if you don't think Carbon is safe, not for you or just plain shyte, stick to something else.
I think bonzo doesn't like carbon bikes![]()