Not so much controversial than simply a piece written by someone who is ignorant.
CF comes in many grades, same as other materials. Different grades will yield different features depending upon design goals.
I’ve owned great steel, alu and CF bikes. My favourite to ride is without doubt CF. My current CF bikes are more comfortable than the 531p steel I’ve had. They are undeniably stronger.
I’ve cracked steel. Alu is too flexible. I’ve had 3 racing crashes on my 6kg CF road bike, one at over 50km/h. Not a scratch. Saddle scuffed, brake lever scuffed, pedal scuffed…frame and fork perfectly fine.
I race my CF MTB. Come off that on rocky terrain loads of times at speed. It’s seen 4 years of abuse most bikes never see. Perfectly fine.
Carbon wheels are stronger than steel. GCN did a test with CF road wheels, no tyres, on off-road over rocks and rough terrain. Didn’t even go out of true.
My CF gravel bike will match or beat any steel bike as a Touring option where comfort and low vibration is key and be lighter and stronger too.
I have been riding bikes since the early 1970’s. All types. All materials. Socially, Commuting, Touring, Racing. The Article is nonsense.
Ignorant of what?
Simply stating that carbon fibre is "stronger" that steel is an incorrect over-simplification at best. Composites behave differently depending on the direction, speed and magnitude of loading; potentially giving them wildly variable properties and causing their performance to be anything between significantly superior and grossly inferior to metals depending on the situation.
Perhaps the biggest safety issue with compostes is difficulty in inspection. While your frames might appear "perfectly fine" to a cursory glance, that really doesn't tell you much and it's possible that previous impacts have left them internally damaged and weakened. Composites also typically have very low strain-to-failure characteristics so often give little warning prior to catastrophic failure.
While composities can give excellent performance when selected and treated appropriately, they're not the universally-superior wonder material that the marketeers would have you believe. Personally I think they have no place in safety-critical consumer goods and wouldn't entertain the idea of riding an old, crash-damaged CF frame without a proper inspection by someone who knows what they're doing..
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