Тёмный

Carbon Bikes - The Truth. Stiffness, weight & Laminate theory  

Peak Torque
Подписаться 61 тыс.
Просмотров 76 тыс.
50% 1

I hope you enjoy this. It took an aeon to make :) For the record and being correct:-
@ 6:30 I mean flexural modulus not tensile
@ 8:40 I mean flexural modulus not tensile
@ 13:08 I mean modulus not stiffness
@ 15:44 I mean flexural not tensile

Наука

Опубликовано:

 

11 июл 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 464   
@evotechcaeltd1583
@evotechcaeltd1583 2 года назад
Great video, and very, very well explained. As you know, the parameter set involved in carbon design is immense - material choice, pre-preg strength/stiffness, laminate schedule, not to mention fiber draping/drop off etc. Then add loading direction and type (static, dynamic, impact), rider mass, power etc, and it gets even more complex. We’re doing a LOT of FEA-based optimisation in this area, which saves a huge amount of time for downstream production. Here’s a very basic overview, but might be interesting to your viewers. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-C8D8KcBWysY.html
@jonevans658
@jonevans658 3 года назад
Hello, I found your presentation quite interesting. I make things with carbon every day and don't disagree hugely with what you are saying but there are points I think could be added. I am not adding these things so much for you because you have a handle on the material but for other people reading these comments who might be interested. In terms of carbon fibre, apart from 'The fast and the Furious' franchise, cycling is the home for the most b*ll-Sh*t on this material... you are not wrong there. The first thing to say is that you can certainly wet out unidirectional fibre fully with less than 40% of the entire construction being resin. If you draw a square and put a circle in it that touches the edges you can see the left over space isn't 'nearly half'. 60:40 fibre:resin is just a very reliable resin content and helps carbon fibre, with amongst other things, the ability to deal with shock better. You can certainly buy prepreg prepared with much less than 40% resin. To create 'typical laminate figures' that can be compared, most manufacturers just quote 60:40. Secondly fibres work in compression and tension, although oddly in carbon fibre this figure isn't the same but it does mean that you don't need to have twice as many laminates to deal with + and - 45 degrees because a single spiral fibre (or multiples) deal with torsion in both directions (nearly), so when you were talking about your schedule and wondering if more 0 axis fibres would mean less torsional strength, the answer is obviously yes but it all depends if you have fully calculated your loads and that gets me onto the biggest point. The killer for carbon fibre is its anisotropy and its something I almost commented on in your analysis of Alex Thompson's IMOCA repair. As you rightly state the load path dictates a fibre's tensile strength and modulus. Its very low at 90 degrees and 100% (diluted) at 0 degrees. Now you would think that at 45 degrees it would be half way on the strength and modulus but it's actually way less. For most fibres the modulus and strength is about half at just 12.5 degrees. This means that getting the fibres lined up with the load paths is essential and unlike aluminium which will deal with minor loads without much consideration, if you don't put the fibres into the structure at the correct angles, these minor loads can actually result in failure of the component. That's without going into the use of knits and woven fabrics rather than unidirectional fibres... or the weight of the fabric/ number of laminates... which will all have a bearing on the mechanical characteristic of the finished laminate. The more you want carbon fibre to be strong and stiff in all directions, (like aluminium) the less carbon fibre is amazing. The more you want it to just be strong in one direction the better it is than something like aluminium. In fact I have made and tested structures in carbon dealing with simple loads that are 7 x stronger by weight than a heat treated 7000 series aluminium. That's like super-amazingly-awesome The thing to note there though is 'simple loads'. If you need isotropy, carbon fibre is less appealing because to create a pseudo-isotropic laminate you need to lay fibres in 5 directions and even then its not as strong 'through' the materials as a true isotropic material like metal. Moreover all carbon fibre is not equal. T700 is an OK fibre; I have about 3 tons of it right now and like it :) but there are certainly fibres I use that are way stiffer and also fibres that are way stronger (or both like T1000 for example). Having said that there are also cheaper 'high strength fibres' which have less stiffness and strength than T700 too. With carbon fibre bikes you really don't know what you are getting half the time. Its about as descriptive as asking someone what a guitar is made of and them telling you 'Wood'. One of my big miffs on bikes is that fibres are often blended in that you can add a percentage of ultra high modulus (the stiffest fibres) or Intermediate modulus (the strongest) fibres and the manufacturers label it as being made of that fibre even though most of the frame is made from a cheap high strength fibre, which is less stiff than an intermediate or high modulus fibre and less strong than an intermediate modulus fibre. Sometimes they do something like put 100% T700, or perhaps a higher performing fibre on the backstays (like literally written on the backstays) ... but its only the backstays themselves that are made of T700 or whatever. It would be like selling something as a cashmere pullover when its just got 2% cashmere and the rest is polyester. Some carbon fibre like Zoltec Pannex 33 only costs about £6/ Kg but some more exotic UHM or intermediate modulus fibres are £hundreds/kg as tow on a spool... not oven woven or bonded. There is a reason for that. What I am saying here is that with carbon fibre stuff often the fibre orientation isn't optimised and often the parts are not made entirely from the fibre quoted. You can certainly get very poor carbon fibre structures and consumer carbon fibre bikes are made to a price. This can mean the margins between aluminium bikes and carbon bikes might not be as great as they could be. It should also be noted that aluminium is a pretty trick material in itself, its just that we are so used to it we aren't very impressed with it anymore. If you want something that is tough and isotropic it has a lot going for it. By your own demonstration though you have shown that for a similar strength and stiffness with T700, you have made a tube that is nearly half the weight of aluminium (due to the difference in density; remember the resin is less dense than the carbon) and lets face it density matters. If you look at a steel tube and an aluminium tube, the thing that makes an aluminium tube potentially stiffer is the fact it has a lower density than steel. You can make a larger diameter tube for the same weight because the wall thickness is the limiting factor. If you go too thin on the wall it can just collapse. If you have a bigger diameter tube it is moving more material away from the centre of deflection, which in turn makes a very stiff tube indeed (the reason why a ruler is floppy if you bend it on its side but stiff bending on edge). Due to the lower density of carbon fibre, you could make an even bigger tube for the same weight than aluminium and really rattle your teeth out. The thing is, for some years they have been able to make aluminium frames that are arguably too stiff anyway, so just saying you can make a lighter frame using carbon properly is probably enough, and certainly enough for the weight-weeny website. There is a reason why some people still prefer a custom steel bike or a bamboo frame and its not because they are chasing stiffness. In all honestly all of the above is a bit academic. If you want to make bike components and sell them they have to pass some kind of certification. Governments regulate stuff to stop bicycles randomly snapping in half and unless you crash bikes or abuse them, they rarely do. This is one of the things that makes me laugh my socks off when I read the weight weenie website. If you get into the business of getting CE certification for a bike frame it is put into a machine that wiggles it around tens of thousands of times. The forces applied are calculated and set by the standards authorities. I am pretty sure the calculations they did for the frame we tested were calculated getting a sumo wrestler to bunny hop off the top of a slide or something. The specifications meant the structure had to be way stronger than it needed to be to do its job... in order that it could be sold in the EU. Bikes ridden in competition need to be available to buy and therefore need to pass these same certifications. There is a specification and test schedule for every component on a bike, each being over-specified. If you were being a real weight weenie, it would be designed with the power output and weight of the rider in mind and if a fatter or stronger person got on it they would break it. If you want to really make light bike parts you need to design and make them yourself. You might find that like Alex Thompson's IMOCA, it might break once in a while but if something is close to being a competitive weight, that's sort of what you are looking for. The reality is though the whole cycling industry is a scam, peddling huge wads of BS. You get reviewers coming out with phrases like "they have tightened up the head geometry by half a degree and its totally transformed it" when people like Mike Burrows seems to think a few degrees isn't even detectable without instrumentation. Its an industry that wants to you to constantly buy the latest thing. A bike with round wheels that rolls well certainly helps but being fit will always make you go faster than having a frame that's a kilo heavier, let alone a few grams. Aluminium frames can certainly be made too stiff, so with carbon fibre, all you can really achieve is something painfully stiffer or something a bit lighter. At an elite level it probably makes a difference but for 99% of riders it probably won't. You certainly don't need a carbon frame to commute to work. If you want to reduce weight by a kilo... take a sh*t and save yourself a grand trying to whittle it off the frame. Consumer bikes aside, carbon fibre is a totally brilliant material and the more exotic fibres I use never cease to amaze me. If you want to be impressed with it as a material look up the foiling IMOCA boats and watch them in full flight. Their hulls are made by bonding a skin of carbon fibre either side of a core material, in this case para-armid honeycomb. The skins are only about 1mm thick either side of a 25mm core. Seriously, 2mm of carbon fibre in total is holding a structure like that together. How awesome is that?
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 3 года назад
Except it hasn't held many Imocas together this year 😅 Jokes aside, thanks for the great comment and all good points. I tried to keep the video to 20 mins and pretty bare-bones and there is way more i could've added as you pointed out. When I was at university i built a bamboo road frame with lugged and bonded joints and it passed ISO 4210 (this is the latest rev, cant remember the former ISO number) but what does that tell you! Cheers
@snookerbg
@snookerbg 3 года назад
If youtube had a best comment award, this comment should undoubtedly get it!
@jimburdett
@jimburdett 3 года назад
Wow what an enlightened and reasoned discussion. Thank you.
@jpcjpc69
@jpcjpc69 3 года назад
Thanks Jon Evans! Now... If I could find a really nice well made reasonably light aluminum XC race frame... does anyone really make one? :(
@PierreAntoineRoiron
@PierreAntoineRoiron 3 года назад
Thank you for this very intersting comment.
@ChinaCycling
@ChinaCycling 4 года назад
The goal of the (marketing departments of the) cycling industry for the past 10-15 years has been to confuse consumers with things that are either intangible or that they cannot be expected to comprehend. Aerodynamics, Carbon Layups, The "Feel" of a bike. All purposefully misquoted and construed with the purpose of stopping the average consumer making an objective comparison to non-branded or off-branded products from the far east. (Where the branded products are made anyway.) I applaud the efforts of the 'new wave' of RU-vidrs attempting to wake up the Sheeple.
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
The Peak Torque frame will have a publicly published layup including torsional and flexural rigidity data 😬
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Excellently put points
@Primoz.r
@Primoz.r 4 года назад
@@PeakTorque Is the frame actually something that's happening? I saw in the Shimano crank failure videos that you've moved to Asia, is it bike industry related?
@domestique3954
@domestique3954 4 года назад
China Cycling I guess because of China’s behavior in the corona case China won’t sell as much carbon products as before! And many companies will try to produce their carbon parts in Europe,UK or US-so maybe we can expect better quality in the near future!
@charlesmansplaining
@charlesmansplaining 4 года назад
@@domestique3954 How's the quality going to improve? They have manufactured carbon bike components using carbon in every conceivable pattern possible, the only hope I believe would be to produce a better adhesive which I also believe is not possible. Man made adhesives break down and get brittle over time and they fail to do the job. Dentistry uses some of the best and even those fail. What makes anyone think that the bike industry is going to use some perfect blend in the production process? I got away from carbon and started buying titanium and aluminum stuff. It's not much heavier and is a lot safer and will last a life time.
@LuescherTeknik
@LuescherTeknik 4 года назад
Great that the #insidecarbonbikes tag is being used. I have seen some fibre volume data on various areas of a frame and it ranged from mid 40's to mid 50's, some of the cut ups that I have done would be even lower than this in some areas. Currently the variability of properties is a concern, it has improved over the last few years compared to the older frames which were really bad. Also consider that little testing is done in terms of production repeat ability, or critical flaw size etc. Having variable quality laminate or voids, wrinkles etc in critical areas significantly changes the model predicted behaviour. Another one of the things that I have seen is that even if they do all the modelling and laminate analysis and even if the part is produced with low void content, often during preparation for painting at the factory they sand through a number of plies at the corners which makes it all meaningless anyway.
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
40% vf! Criminal. Have you ever done any pure tensile testing on sections of frame? When I worked out the modulus in the video using CLT, that was flexural modulus. I wonder how close the pure tensile moudulus of the laminate would be to the pure fibre modulus (circa 230GPa).
@LuescherTeknik
@LuescherTeknik 4 года назад
@@PeakTorque Yeah, some laminate is pretty bad. A good UD laminate will be close to 70%, wovens typically come in at low 60's. I haven't done this mech testing, I have been wanting to do this for some time, probably a good job for a uni student project. Any takers out there, I can supply the frames!
@TheBtgt
@TheBtgt 4 года назад
@@LuescherTeknik Would love to take on this project. I've sent you an email. Cheers
@MDVH92
@MDVH92 4 года назад
@@LuescherTeknik I'd take it as a thesis project, but the logistics might be too complicated since I study in Germany...
@Peter-tc3ep
@Peter-tc3ep 4 года назад
Peak Torque better carbon work wether a bike or any other structure is usually 70-75% fiber. Your theory on aluminum is very flawed you forgot welds, metals must be welded using heavier softer medals to connect them. These point offer flexing, stress points and therefore less stiffness. Proper carbon is laid like designing a bridge or any other structure, fibers are directed in multiple directions to create opposing or balancing forces offering increased strength. Carbon can also be shaped much better then aluminum giving it structural shape advantages for stiffness. A harsh bend in a carbon frame can offer stiffness while in an aluminum frame can offer a weak point where the metal is already bent, hence more weld points. This is the reason many bike manufacturers moved into carbon, even a poorly designed carbon bike can weigh less and offer the same stiffness as an aluminum frame and this can be achieved easier then a CAAD aluminum frame. Which is why I don’t understand why heavier or carbon frames with lower fiber ratios like 55-60% fiber are not much cheaper. They should be even less in cost then a well designed/built aluminum bike. Carbon, similar to any metal bike has many different quality levels so the material name alone can’t determine if it’s a better bike. But carbon can be built to a similar stiffness at almost half aluminum frames weight. Lightest carbon frame at 640g, lightest aluminum frame 1090g, keep in mind better components can quickly make up the difference unless you have an unlimited budget.
@ptrbssr
@ptrbssr 4 года назад
That's what I like about engineers like you: analyse the properties of the base materials and their applications, having technical knowledge and understand AND being able to explain it to us viewers. This was time well spent from both sides. I thank you for creating and sharing this video & insights.
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Thank you, Peter.
@Peter-tc3ep
@Peter-tc3ep 4 года назад
He completely forgot to include that aluminum frames have welds and can not have the same design shape capabilities as carbon. Plus better carbon is 70-75 fiber, yes cheap mass produced carbon can 55-60% fiber but that’s not all. Plus better carbon frames can be designed like a structure or bridge with purposeful cross laying of fibers. Hard edges on aluminum would need to be welded and connections are welded, which introduces a softer heavier metal. And limits the shape of the metal frame. The welds reduce the stiffness of the frame as well and can create stress points if not properly welded. He only looked at if carbon was poorly done then yes it can be similar to well done aluminum.
@ptrbssr
@ptrbssr 4 года назад
@@Peter-tc3ep interesting reflection on both materials. Both have their pros and cons. The end product is only good if the manufacturer does a good job in either welding an alu frame or laying up the carbon and 'bake the bike'. Thanks for taking time to reply! Maybe the video isn't complete in all aspects, but nevertheless give useful insight in what carbon actually is. Same for the video about the rim surface, heat up of resin and structural damage that can result from it.
@event4216
@event4216 3 года назад
@@Peter-tc3ep Your argument is valid (sound like, anyway) but interesting part is which manufacturers use high density layups and in which frames, and how much they do cost. To me this seems like it's viable to make high quality small batches for pro use and just cook average frames for general use. Well, just like with metal frames with nuance that crappy metal frame isn't as dangerous as CF frame. Or fork, of course. So pros can have quality framesets as they are given by sponsors and rest should make their own choice. I've made mine.
@cjohnson3836
@cjohnson3836 3 года назад
@@Peter-tc3ep And you're only considering optimal carbon layup, while its well known that carbon frames are often riddled with voids and other faults. Have fun with that crack propagation on that overpriced plastic toy.
@dubplateriddim
@dubplateriddim 3 года назад
I completely relate to this guy being a disgruntled engineer as a Chamical Engineer myself. So many things annoy me about the cycling industry; but I don't have the motivation to create content about the utter sheiße I have come across. I applaud you for taking the time to address these issues comprehensively and share your work with us via RU-vid.
@rasmuswi
@rasmuswi 3 года назад
When I first heard of carbon fiber, it was in windsurfing masts, and in that case, the big selling point was the reflex response rate. Basically, when a carbon mast deflected, it would straighten itself twice as fast as an aluminium mast with the same stiffness. I think the key point here was same stiffness, the sail makers were selling aluminuim as well as carbon fiber masts for the same sails, so the carbon masts had to be the exact same stiffness as the aluminium mast, otherwise one of them would be totally incompatible with the sail. But if the carbon mast had the same stiffness as the aluminium mast, it would of course be a lot lighter, which of course meant that stiffness had a lot less weight to accelerate, and thus it would straighten itself faster. Also, those early carbon masts, around 1990, were hilariously unreliable. Sails would lay rigged on the beach, and suddenly the mast would shatter without warning. Today, carbon masts are pretty much bomb proof and can withstand absolutely unbelievable levels of abuse. I'm always kind of fascinated that no other sport seems to talk about reflex response rates (or maybe tennis and badminton does), it seems to be all about weight and stiffness.
@Yonok2009
@Yonok2009 4 года назад
As an engineer I appreciate the work required to make this vdo Well done :) PS I still riding steel :)
@bimmerbent
@bimmerbent 3 года назад
Dito, to Everything you said, EE riding Chrome Molly for the Rest of my life.
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
I hope you enjoy this. It took an aeon to make :) For the record and being correct:- @ 6:30 I mean flexural modulus not tensile @ 8:40 I mean flexural modulus not tensile @ 13:08 I mean modulus not stiffness @ 15:44 I mean flexural not tensile
@jackhammer40k_
@jackhammer40k_ 4 года назад
If my opinion is worth anything, this is good. Like
@jaredfontaine2002
@jaredfontaine2002 4 года назад
Every year the bikes are 15% stiffer and 9% lighter. When does it end? Plus, please do a video about bike manufacturers putting graphene and boron etc in the epoxy? Bianchi etc. Thanks!
@hanskoot6254
@hanskoot6254 4 года назад
There is more to it than stiffness of the bike. Essentially a bending bike stores energy. If you get back what you stored you have a winner. A well designed carbon bike may be a lot more efficient in retrieving that energy. In that case the secret of carbon lies elsewhere.
@Oakpathetics
@Oakpathetics 3 года назад
Nice work. As you’ve noted stiffness is not measured in tension but a function of its modulus of elasticity and moment of inertia (E x I). I’ve never seen a engineer working in a bike lab, but I suspect they wouldn’t be analysing stress/strain from first principles (with respect to the applied loads and member capacity).. too conservative.. they’d be using finite element software.. similar program I’d use for steel hollow section buildings/bridges. For example, your spreadsheet is calculating the Young’s modulus at one particular section of a tube. The carbon fibres require a minimum development length to achieve their full tensile capacity.. finite element analysis would define where particular fibre layers can stop/start to economise the stiffness and ultimately, weight.
@markrushton1516
@markrushton1516 3 года назад
Can I just say brainiacs on bike forum. Has the world gone mad? Usually it's enthusiastic amateurs talking bubbles about aero, stiffness, lighter, power!!! or whatever the brand wants them to say.
@elorz007
@elorz007 4 года назад
** Hambini checklist ** Powerpoint: check Insults and sarcasm: check Engineering knowledge: check Hating mainstream cycling media: check
@KhunAdam
@KhunAdam 4 года назад
Thank you Peak Torque! I own an 80s vintage Columbus steel frame bike, two carbon bikes, and and three alloy bikes, and your analysis confirms my perceptions of their ride qualities. They are basically all the same size and I have used more or less the same alloy wheels and tires. Alloy bike 1 is the stiffest, but uncomfortable, as it was not a great design, cheap, with no subtlety in design. Alloy bike 2 is a bit less stiff, climbs well, but compliance is not great on rought tarmac. The 3rd alloy bike is a Wilier and it is lovely to ride, with a balance of compliance, and stiffness, and feels like the steel bike, though it is lighter than all the other alloy bikes and not much heavier than my carbon bikes. The Columbus SL tube bike was perfect for me when I was young and 68 kgs and racing crits. It is relatively heavy, even though it is not stiff. Now I am 73 kgs and it feels "soft". My de Rosa Idol carbon bike is by far the best climbing bike as it has a big down tube and BB386 bottom bracket. Yet is also feels comfortable and it corners reliably without much torsion flex. I feel the designers thought about the layup. My Cinelli Estrada is early carbon tech and was sold as a Grand Fondo bike. It's not stiff at all, quite light, compliant, but I would not recommend it as a crit bike. It is much less stiff around the BB than the de Rosa. This confirms your conclusion that there is just too many variables like the size, geometry and weight of the rider, plus the riding style, and as a consumer, there is very little chance to know these details about layup and design. Intelligent and unbiassed test riding and reviewing is needed more than ever.
@valiantabello
@valiantabello 4 года назад
This is one of my favorite bike related videos already
@jmh70
@jmh70 4 года назад
Thanks, I really enjoyed watching this. You have a great style of presentation covering the technicalities but still easy to listen to.
@frankronald5761
@frankronald5761 3 года назад
I tell you mate, you have made the most interesting technical video I have ever seen. You really have great knowledge, and more importantly, communication skills. Fair play to you. I respect you. Thank you.
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 3 года назад
Very nice to hear, no need to thank me! Cheers
@sixonesix9429
@sixonesix9429 3 года назад
Found you through Hambini. Glad I did. You're both debunking marketing shite. Love hearing engineers giving us a proper insight. Many, many thanks. Subbed.
@jordanrundell9962
@jordanrundell9962 3 года назад
As a fellow Mechanical Engineer, I highly enjoy these analysis videos you make. Cheers.
@rubixmonkey0839
@rubixmonkey0839 3 года назад
Very interesting topic I would have never otherwise been aware of. Thank you for spreading the knowledge.
@lukewalker1051
@lukewalker1051 5 месяцев назад
As a fellow mechanical engineer, perhaps the best video I have seen comparing carbon fiber to aluminum bicycle mechanical properties.
@JB-yk5ic
@JB-yk5ic 3 года назад
Thanks for the information, clear and well presented. Keep up the good work!
@DominikNal
@DominikNal 3 года назад
Such a GOOD VID, been binge watching some of your vids and they are all very technical which is amazing! Good work
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 3 года назад
Dominik N thank you. Means a lot
@aleksandr176
@aleksandr176 4 года назад
First of all I would like to thank you for producing this video. I am enjoying your videos for some time, the first one I saw was about mounting a Quarq power meter and a BB - I still remember the comment that if you waited for industry to sort itself, you would never get a power meter :) The generalized marketing message I am reading/getting from the cycling industry related to the carbon material is: 1. Carbon is lighter 2. Carbon's stiffness can be controlled and "strategically" used in different areas of the frame differently unlike Alu 3. Pros ride carbon so it's stiff / stiff enough 4. Price is high 5. Carbon product is premium 6. Premium manufacturers have knowledge, engineering experience, CFD, "win tunnels", etc. so they know how to "properly" make a CF product unlike "far east". None of those points seem to be denied by this video. Which is probably good - I wasn't a complete fool. Keep up the good work!
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Hi Aleks. Correct. I am not disagreeing with the use of it, just bringing the market's expectation down to earth. It's easy to get lost when it's a complex material to understand.
@rosomak8244
@rosomak8244 Год назад
Pros ride what the industrie tells them to ride. Like recently the push for inferior disc brakes or just silly stuff like electronic shifting.
@Simon-gk9ug
@Simon-gk9ug 4 года назад
Great video and very insightful! Completely forgot about the impact of the epoxy to the overall modulus of that carbon/layup modulus.
@krider7296
@krider7296 4 года назад
Great and very informative video, thank you for putting this together. The bike industry is full of so much hype and they play it up to the insecure audience which swallow it up. Most of the cycling channels on RU-vid market questionable products to an audience which doesn't understand how things work and worry more about looking stupid, out of fashion or falling behind on what their friends have purchased or adopted. In addition to this engineering approach we may need a cycling psychologist channel where they promote self confidence and being content in their own skin.
@JamesSocialCycling
@JamesSocialCycling 3 года назад
Late to this party, but this time last year decided to bin the cheap carbon for an Emonda alr5 which I was amazed at once built how light it was for the money. Appreciate the video and time spent putting it together. I’m all for Aluminium Frames, so much lighter... on your pocket😊👍
@kevinfrost1579
@kevinfrost1579 3 года назад
Outstanding explanation thanks much appreciated. Things everyone who owns or is contemplating a carbon frame ought to know 👍
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 2 года назад
Thanks
@rp6760
@rp6760 4 года назад
Well explained👏. Owner of 5 carbon bikes... but always felt my CAAX does not really stands back... makes more sense now. Thx for a great video.
@dakalla
@dakalla 3 года назад
I have a Caad12 and with some "cheaper" carbon bikes i tried my caad feels stiffer, especially uphill. A friend and i can both feel the difference in the cranks, although im not a strong heavy sprinter. He has a 2016/17 Trek Domane, but in a larger framesize, so that maybe also contributes to that.
@EddieRyce
@EddieRyce 3 года назад
Why have I only found your channel now - very informative thank you and take a bow
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 3 года назад
Eddie Ryce thank you
@bikemmm6167
@bikemmm6167 4 года назад
great video!! I think Giant does some of the best carbon layup
@Ardena111
@Ardena111 3 года назад
Incredible well done. Best explanation I have heard about carbon fiber. Well done. Thanks
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 2 года назад
Cheers
@dankruvand4937
@dankruvand4937 3 года назад
Matrix algebra took me back to engineering school, a few decades ago. Thanks for all the work that you put into this video!
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 3 года назад
Cheers Dan
@JaysonBryant
@JaysonBryant 4 года назад
Too funny. Just sent this video to friends for their viewing, As it turns out, one of them happens to ride with you in HK. Anyway, great video
@eddiesmith9836
@eddiesmith9836 3 года назад
Interesting! I have had and used nearly daily a Specialized Roubaix SL3 carbon fiber bike frame for almost 10 years, well over 35000 miles, and its what I consider bombproof. I'm also a heavy rider 239lbs.
@mikeshedhead3568
@mikeshedhead3568 3 года назад
Good explanation of the issues relating to sizing and analysis of carbon laminates. Brings back happy/frustrating memories stressing laminates on Airbus & Military aircraft. Retired now & I think I miss the technical stuff (but not the timescales!). A little bit jealous:)
@1958vintage
@1958vintage 3 года назад
I've gone for aluminium bars and extensions on my Time Trial bike for three reasons: much cheaper, and actually less than 100g difference (about 3 oz in imperial) and I've seen a few clips of carbon bars failing on TT bikes in ways that I've never seen with aluminium (bearing in mind that I'm an amateur on a budget I was concerned that any budget bars I bought would be even more likely to fail than the professionals' bars). Watching this seems to confirm that I made a good choice (beat my PB this year too, not bad at 62!). Thanks Peak Torque, I love your technical analyses.
@GuilhermeSantos-uz8jd
@GuilhermeSantos-uz8jd 3 года назад
What a great video. Loved the info about how to calculate the carbon layers, not something easy to find!
@terrydickerson5466
@terrydickerson5466 4 года назад
Thank you very much for the video. It's the clearest explanation I've seen of exploding the myths of carbon fibre material stiffness that I have seen. Just a couple of points though: It might be worthwhile mentioning fibre wrinkling as a major contributor to lowering the specific stiffness of the material. Not only inadvertently wrinkling but also that due to woven fibres. Or maybe that all just complicate things too much the viewers. Secondly, Michael Ashby's book Engineering Materials 2, chapter 25, Table 25.2, has some useful data on specific strength and moduli composites vs aluminium alloy. Thirdly it might be worthwhile clarifying that you're talking about material stiffness only. A follow-up video on the influence of (tube) geometry might be a useful contribution. Finally it would be great to see your communication skills put to addressing the 'stiff yet compliment' myth. Terry
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Yep great points, Terry. Thank you. In the video i was discussing material props only, and thought it was long enough. I'l do tube shapes/geom in the next one maybe. Cheers.
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Terry, tube geometry video now up.
@FiveMinuteVelo
@FiveMinuteVelo 4 года назад
PT, thanks very much for letting me know but I had already seen it. It's all very nicely communicated. I have already added a comment but using my Five Minute Velo channel. Sorry a bit of a bit cheeky plug for the 5MV channel too. Terry
@bimmerbent
@bimmerbent 3 года назад
I think the Industry does know they cant get it right, thus keep changing the shape to "marketing obsolete" the previous build and keep repeating this process, and maybe add another gear, etc... . Great Video - Thank You !!
@davidcarroll4150
@davidcarroll4150 4 года назад
❤️ at last I found someone who knows what they are talking about!
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Who's that then??
@davidcarroll4150
@davidcarroll4150 4 года назад
Peak Torque 😉
@hockeyiscanada
@hockeyiscanada 3 года назад
Awesome video !! Carbon still is a wonder material, maybe not for the stiffness but being able to makes bikes lighter has help out a lot and being able to shape the tubes and every other area of the bikes has and is a real good thing for bikes !! And it looks really cool even if it isn't painted. No material is perfect. But, the best engineers in the World seem to use it in all high end industries, from bikes, cars, planes, helicopters, space, and it has realky changed and improved many things in many things. So, it is actually a big improvement and in a real way a wonder material.
@iainp84
@iainp84 3 года назад
Great video! Better than some of my undergrad lectures (from what I can remember of them). Another thing that would be interesting to talk about would be toughness & material degradation mechanisms (carbon fibre vs aluminium). I don't expect I'll be riding the same carbon fibre frames in 15 years time (for a variety of reasons), whereas I'd expect my aluminium commuter to still be going strong!
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 3 года назад
Exactly. Fragile when dropped and invisible damage!
@KnowledgePerformance7
@KnowledgePerformance7 3 года назад
This is amazing, thanks so much! As a sailor who has done lots of research into dyneema and other synthetic fibers, it seems they fall into a similar situation. Lots of nonsensical marketing wank and total bs to confuse the consumer. Drives me up a wall
@freds-shed
@freds-shed 4 года назад
Thanks , you answered a lot of my questions
@camefluch
@camefluch 4 года назад
For me the bigest advantage of CF is that your Can tweek the shape of the frame more easily to put material where strenght is needed. That's how, Compared to hydroformed aluminium tube frame, you get lighter and stiffer bike. And an other important advantage of CF compare to AL is fatigue strenght.
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Yep good point. Tube shapes much easier to manipulate. In the video i was discussing material properties only. Maybe I'll do tube shape/geometry in another video. Cheers
@ewann3
@ewann3 3 года назад
This is explained very well, as long as the listener understands the principles in terminology, shear, tensile, tortional etc. Explanation of the downtube forces was great, see Trek with straight shot down tubes with a large box sections. A lot of the problem is aesthetics & aerodynamics Vs structural integrity
@fuelbasti
@fuelbasti 3 года назад
Thanks for your upload and lesson. I think the "only" brand which creates a very good compromise between stiffness and lightweight is still spin-system bikes from Germany in Kassel. But for sure in the end its is also a question of how popular a material is.
@rayF4rio
@rayF4rio 4 года назад
Still love my CAAD10. Want to impact ride quality? Tire Pressure!! Still amazed how many riders don't realize the major factor impacting ride quality is: #1 Tire Pressure., #2 Wheel Construction, #3 Tire Size/Quality.
@theadventurebiker
@theadventurebiker 3 года назад
#4 Suspension (in the case of mountain bikes) 👍
@michal.ranachowski
@michal.ranachowski 4 года назад
Great video! Also worth notice that CFRP laminates experience coupling between bending-twisting, compression-bending etc. depending on layup, which is described by matrix A,B and D in Classical Lamination Theory (wing of Northrop Grumman X-29 is really interesting example). In terms of bicycle frame rigidity this can be an advantage and disadvantage. Regards
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Yep Michal. Yep, great points. I tried to keep the video as simple as s possible :) also I didn't mention the pure tensile moudulus of the laminate can still be very high (same as the fibers). The equivalent modulus i worked out using the CLT was flexural mod. Cheers!
@stijne3
@stijne3 3 года назад
Love your informed videos!!!
@hoodyps
@hoodyps 4 года назад
Amazing video, thank you 👍👌
@80Juvat
@80Juvat 3 года назад
Great video. This helps me not fall for the marketing hype. It's hard to justify spending 50-100% more for the relatively small performance gain. I'll accept the penalty of a few watts of performance and use that money for a professional bike fit, better tires, kit, and perhaps an upgrade of my tools that will keep my bike operating efficiently.
@pauladams5673
@pauladams5673 3 года назад
I do enjoy your videos. Aluminium does have diectional stiffness, particularly for extruded and rolled aluminium, which is why aircraft components have to be machined in sympathy with the grain flow of the aluminium.
@samgibson2395
@samgibson2395 3 года назад
Great video. It’s like sitting in Prof Ian Farrows lectures again! Haha
@bengreen1262
@bengreen1262 3 года назад
Chugging through your back catalogue ~ great video ~ never ridden a carbon bike and not sure I like the engineering of carbon due to the way it fails ie snaps when you need it ~ so this was interesting
@waynewolfsbauer2531
@waynewolfsbauer2531 4 года назад
Excellent video as are his other videos very very informativ eand helpful.
@monkeybizniz2095
@monkeybizniz2095 3 года назад
Great vid Mr Peak Torque. You said that it's hard to get the fibre layup correct, but as I understand it, most of the big CF bike manufacturers spend alot of time using (& sometimes even developing their own) complex computer modeling programs to work out where & how best CF bicycles' stress points need reinforcing, while simultaneously reducing their excess weigh?. Surely they're putting in a professional & diligent amount of effort in that? And surely they collectively improve the design & efficiency of CF frames & other parts due to their desire for constant improvement & efficiency? 🤔
@jean-marietop1451
@jean-marietop1451 2 года назад
Great video. I really mean it.
@bobqzzi
@bobqzzi 3 года назад
Really nice technical video. The part I find most amusing about the whole bike frame game is that people massively overrate how frame properties actually affect riding a bike from either a comfort or performance standpoint (aerodynamics excepted). It's all angels dancing on the head of a pin.
@andybucher452
@andybucher452 3 года назад
Well explained mate. I'm Chief Eng in an aerospace business and do deal with laminates quite a bid. You did stumble over your properties a couple of times but still great job of dis-disillusioning people of this marketing magic. Also worth mentioning is that the quality of the end product does not only depend on design quality (which you described and is quite difficult) but even more on the quality of the manufacturing process which I always liken to baking. Minor changes in the process can significantly affect the outcome and we rely on people to get it right... AndyB
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 3 года назад
ANDY BUCHER cheers. Can you elaborate? I did say tensile a few times when i should have said flexural and vice versa. I didn’t describe the link between shear and tensile mod in laminates (as dealt with by classic laminate theory). I tried to keep it brief as possible!
@andybucher452
@andybucher452 3 года назад
@@PeakTorque Hi, for the purpose of this vid it is prob fine but as you say stiffness vs strength, longitudinal vs transverse properties and loading. More of a general comment and not easy to explain for a very diverse audience. The big picture is much more important to the audience than specific detail and you got there very well. If I talk to newbies or less technical people I even try to rephrase in layman's terms to make sure the minimum comes across. AndyB
@marcusdali3997
@marcusdali3997 4 года назад
Nice Video. Another fun fact is that each fiber not only the bundle must have epoxy on it. You can not have dry fiber touching dry fiber. The polymer mechanics are very impressive also.
@bigkification
@bigkification 4 года назад
I like this guy..... understands the truth about CF, which isn't that diffcult to understand. When I repaired the bumper tabs on my car, I could have used glass fibre or similar but I used CF because it's easier to work with. It isn't some magic ingredient. I prefer an aluminium bike frame as it's far more durable and far cheaper!
@bozukbeyin
@bozukbeyin 3 года назад
Great video!
@thevirtualeconomy
@thevirtualeconomy 3 года назад
Very interesting, I enjoyed this alot. It seems you are confirming my instincts that the issue is with the bike industry pandering to what their mostly male consumers desire, which is shiny things which signal the owner is some sort of high value legend. What this has left us with a new crop of bike fans who obsess over disc brakes and having as much carbon fibre as possible, with extra twat points if you have aero wheels. In short, bikes are getting more expensive, less light and less durable but who cares because the more money you have the cooler you can look.
@paolocapozzi927
@paolocapozzi927 4 года назад
I'm a mechanical engineer myself, but never dealt with composites and carbon fiber. Nevertheless...having the background knowledge to understand what you are talking about I must give you massive kudos for the clarity of your explanation! Furthermore I'm also a very keen cyclist! I have an OPEN U.P., which is considered as an excellent bike by basically anyone. And in fact, it is! But for a very long trip that I'm planning for the summer (now with Corona we will see if I manage...shit virus...) I got a Mason Bokeh. This was driven by the fact that I wanted something a bit more stable than the OPEN and on which I could pack more luggage. The bikes have very similar tires (WTB Horizon on the OPEN and WTB bywayon the Bokeh, both 650b), the OPEN has carbon rims and the Bokeh has Alu rims, but they are both HUNT and they are almost the same in geometry (the rims I mean). I tend to ride the Bokeh with much more load on it, but when I ride it only with bottle and spares I actually don't feel that much difference with respect to the OPEN. The handling is a little bit slowlier because of the geometry (longer trail, longer chainstays...) but when I stand up on the pedals and put down some power I feel basically the same stiffness from the frame. I'm not advertising Mason bikes here but you would not believe how good that bike feels and handles for an aluminium frame. And, added bonus...threaded BB!! True it's heavier...but hey, that is supposed to be carrying 15Kg of luggage so a few hundred grams more on the frame will be negligible! All of this digression just to tell you that from my epxerience I agree with what you said! And that I loved the video!
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Thanks, Paolo.
@waynosfotos
@waynosfotos 4 года назад
I do a few vids like this, and most people just won't believe it, it is amazing how good the marketing is surrounding bikes. People just argue blindly and give examples of tests carried out on GCN, cycling weekly, etc. Which we know are not proper tests, by an independent body. It does amaze me how people really swallow the kool aid. All i can say is marketing is more powerful than the truth.
@anielyantra1
@anielyantra1 3 года назад
I do enjoy your analysis. The engineering of a laminate is quite complex and that does not take into account the variations in manufacturing. Your work up emphasizes why the young modulus of the material is far more important. Frankly I will will stick with steel.
@soapkingzzr
@soapkingzzr 4 года назад
Thanks for the insights ! Riding carbon bikes feels a bit like riding a kite ( kind of scary ) . Titanium / alloy parts on a Columbus Genius or Max build is the peak of cycling technology for me . GS
@Solarsystem50
@Solarsystem50 3 года назад
Great content. Keep it up!
@kikomorse
@kikomorse 4 года назад
Great content, thanks for the clear explanation! I have a question, though: how do RTM carbon frames (like the Time frame covered by Hambini's video, for example) compare to laminate CF ones and Al? Keep the excellent work, =)
@domd99
@domd99 4 года назад
Really interesting video. There are very few people that know what they are on about and are willing to tell people why bike manufacturers and marketing companies are chatting out of their arse
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Thanks for the comments
@PierreAntoineRoiron
@PierreAntoineRoiron 3 года назад
Same demographic as cycling ! I lovethat ! Thank you for not acting like it was OK. (BTW, I'm in this very demographic).
@PierreAntoineRoiron
@PierreAntoineRoiron 3 года назад
Very good video, thank you.
@keifykat2647
@keifykat2647 3 года назад
My Man you could’ve picked anyone, there’s plenty of Yankees out there but u had to pick a fellow Brit & RU-vidr Shmee... True that it’s over used for decorative parts but that’s the market. Demand is leading us in that direction.. look at all the “M” cars from BMW, they got CF trim panels to set them apart from standard models. Enjoyed the vid, keep them coming!
@MozOnBikes
@MozOnBikes 4 года назад
Great video debunking the bs that is feed to us by the cycling industry. I’m guessing that some of the key IP that a large cycling brand has is the load cases for its various products, road, xc, dh etc. That it has catalogue over time via instrumentation of bikes in use that is continuously refined. At least I hope so! If it’s anything like the industry I work in there probably is a peculiar load case that’s not normal to everyday use that generally bulks up the laminates. I could just a top tube sitter, the Danny Mac wannabe or the who put that fooking curb there load cases really changing things from the day to day use.
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Yeh great comments. My guess is the Eq Young's modulus in bending of these industry layups is between 80-90GPa. And they can bulk up the laminate with a bit more thickness to add stiffness geometrically.
@morellish
@morellish 3 года назад
Super interesting!
@BICIeCOMPUTERconGabriele
@BICIeCOMPUTERconGabriele 3 года назад
Impressive video! Just subscribed!
@edmcguirk8603
@edmcguirk8603 4 года назад
Yikes... It's not just about stiffness. It's a compromise between stiffness, strength, and weight. It's easy to make an aluminum frame that is stiffer and lighter than carbon. It just would not be strong enough to be safe. It's the strength of carbon per pound that makes it an interesting material. Since stiffness of a tube goes up at the cube of its diameter, you can always get whatever stiffness you want with a small change in geometry as long as the material is strong enough to prevent buckling. This stuff was all hashed out when comparing steel, aluminum, and titanium and there was no winner until you brought cost, fatigue, corrosion, and fashion into consideration. Carbon brings the added complexities of fiber orientation but the results are the same. Discussion of stiffness means NOTHING unless strength and weight are included.
@JonFairhurst
@JonFairhurst 4 года назад
Ed McGuirk - Great point about tube diameter. I have some 1/2” CF tube that is quite easy to bend and some 2” CF tube that feels infinitely strong in the hands. Assuming that the frame won’t buckle, it’s easy to look at tube sizes to get a feel for stiffness of a bike frame, and we can easily weigh it. It’s harder to check for quality (sonogram), material, and layup as a consumer. I’m wary of the marketing claims of magical materials and layups to make things stiffer, yet more compliant. Unless we can do extended rides on competing bikes, we have no idea if what they claim is true, and no idea if it can be felt in the real world. Looking at tube sizes, shapes, and geometries can tell us more about the design, given that we don’t see it constructed and can’t cut it apart. In my case, I was looking at the Orbea OMX or the Cannondale SuperSix EVO. The OMX has much larger tubes from head tube through the down tube bottom bracket and seat stays, so I bought the Orbea. Maybe the Cannondale uses a magic layup to get away with smaller, lighter shapes, but how could I ever know?
@MrPoopnoddy
@MrPoopnoddy 3 года назад
@@JonFairhurst I have two 1" CFRP tubes and one is 50% stiffer than the other. They weigh the same. I do some work with the French carbon fibre producer Epsilon and I can choose my orientation on square pultruded hollow tubes (30x30x2.5). I recently acquired about 2500 metres of the stuff with a fibre oriented 30° to the direction of pultrusion and it's insanely stiff. It will, however, be compromised in other areas. If you're paying Paul, you've robbed Peter. To be honest, in mechanical engineering, I prefer alu and steel almost every time. I'd hate to be a bike designer. I chose CFRP for this project because, largely it's lighter and it spins really fast - the lower moment of inertia ruled in favour of carbon - but I don't really like it. Too fussy.
@JonFairhurst
@JonFairhurst 3 года назад
MrPoopnoddy - Yes! Fiber pattern and direction are fundamentally important, as is the type and resin content. If we normalize these, diameter makes a huge difference. As consumers, we don’t get details about layup, but we can see the outer dimensions clearly. That and riding feel are about all we have to go by.
@MrPoopnoddy
@MrPoopnoddy 3 года назад
@@JonFairhurst yes, I know. I design machine rollers for a living. I was saying that CFRP adds another level of complexity that's almost independent of diameter.
@petter6710
@petter6710 4 года назад
After watching Luescher Teknik's videos I doubt many carbon frames' layups actually conform to original design/requirements. You might design the ideal layup but manufacturing will wreck that. There appears to be very poor QC in the industry.
@ltu42
@ltu42 3 года назад
I have a suspicion that Luescher is just overly critical, according to him 95% of manufacturers are making unrideable dangerous crap. But in reality millions of people ride these frames and experience no problems. In all likelihood some material defects are expected and accounted for in the designs. Bike frames are not aircraft parts.
@Dave_the_Dave
@Dave_the_Dave Год назад
I'd love to see you do this analysis on rims, carbon vs aluminum. It should be the same story. People say that the carbon rim is stiffer. But the same cross sectional shape should be about the same stiffness. The deflection of tire and tube should be orders of magnitude higher than that of the rim. My theory is that people change wheels and maybe throw on new tires and they pump them up hard, go for a ride and it all feels stiffer and what they really feel is freshly pumped up tires.
@rosomak8244
@rosomak8244 Год назад
Carbon rims are absolute technical top of the line nonsense. It's the SPOKES which give them stiffness anyway.
@petejackson9285
@petejackson9285 3 года назад
Great stuff! I'm from the sailing world, although my mountain bike has done several thousand miles, and I am forever trying to tell sailors that carbon isnt the holy grail material. In fact a carbon bow fitting to replace a stainless steel component ended up weight 80grms more but cost £800! Not forgetting the fiting of the item, which needed hull surgery and, therefore, more cost. So to replace this metal fitting ended up gaining weight and cost over £1200 fpr the privilage of having carbon.
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 3 года назад
A good example! Cheers
@jbergene
@jbergene 3 года назад
Fun fact: in 2012 I ordered parts for a dream bike. I had a cheap aluminium bike with shimano 105 + Mavic Aksium wheels. I ordered Ultegra, a Ridley Damocles frame, a good saddle and Mavic Cosmic Carbon wheelset. The Mavic wheels got heavily delayed so I built up the bike with help from a bike mechanic, then since I couldnt wait I smacked my old Aksium wheels on the bike.- I literally couldnt feel any difference at all. Zero. Thought it was the same bike. Then a month later I got the Cosmic wheels and OH MAN! what an upgrade. The bike became SUPER responsive! If I had known all I needed to buy was a new wheelset that would be the only thing I would buy. So yeah, carobon fiber hype.
@MrPascaldg
@MrPascaldg 4 года назад
Thanks for this video, I was very to the point and objective. It actually reflects my personal experience switching between aluminium and carbon bikes: carbon is for sure lighter but not necessarily stiffer. The stiffest (impression) frame I have ridden is the aluminium Colnago World Cup cyclocross, specially the way that bike deals with potholes is amazing, it just takes the impact without any flex/vibration. I also had a Specialized Venge which felt very stiff torsionally (pushing hard out of the saddle) but which was also having a lot of road vibrations in the frame and so was very uncomfortable to ride, eventually after just 3k km and a few rides in the rain the BB started creaking so I sold it. Now I don't want carbon bikes anymore, they are lighter but a lot more expensive and not durable (creaking issues) versus the aluminium equivalent. Could you also make a comparison of alu vs steel. I also think steel is also overrated versus aluminium. Steel is more expensive, heavier and I do not believe anything about the statements that it is more comfortable due to better at absorbing vibrations. I think that if it a steel frame is more comfortable it is due to the frame build but not due to the material. I find it sad they don't make any high-end aluminium bikes anymore, I still think it is, everything considered, the best material to make bikes.
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Hey Louis. V interesting comments. I totally agree with most of it. This mythical bollocks about steel being comfortable and aluminium being harsh is just a case of cycling media regurgitating shit information they do not understand. As you say, its a myth. Its all about Young's modulus, and tube size. The damping property of steel, alu or ti is almost identical.
@eoinkenny3188
@eoinkenny3188 4 года назад
@@PeakTorque What actually are material damping properties in rigid structures? It's never been a topic even vaguely approached upon in all of my studies. I'm guessing it's not even a intrinsic material property.
@rosomak8244
@rosomak8244 Год назад
@@PeakTorque I use a steel frame on my daily commuter e-bike. It's a good one - threads on the bottom bracket don't wear out that easy after many many BB changes. It is relatively elastic, which helps with comfort. It doesn't dink. It's durable and far safer at 40km/h rides. The frame is braced , so I don't worry about any joints. It's hi-ten tubes and normal steel back triangle. I could easy weld it and have slapped disc brakes on to it because I got annoyed with wheel lacing once in half a year. This frame is from the early 80-ties. However there is one thing one should do with those which the industry (on purpose?) never did and never does - spray it with automotiv anti corrosion wax from the inside! When done even once a frame will last almost infinitively. There is really no problem with corrosion per se when it comes to steel: Just a bit of conservation and you are set.
@jonswanson7766
@jonswanson7766 Год назад
I had a Raleigh Technium for thirty years and it was great, needed a new bike so I got a Focus Izalco. Not much better, but better, I'm over seventy and I can ride pretty well and the bike helps. Aluminum versus carbon.
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
Plus for all the uncertainty/ball ache in manufacturing and QC let me refer you to messrs Luescher and Hambini!
@papawhisky2935
@papawhisky2935 4 года назад
It's Dr Hambini thank you very much.
@Hambini
@Hambini 4 года назад
@@papawhisky2935 What Jack said!!!
@ironmantooltime
@ironmantooltime 4 года назад
@@Hambini Dr of Fuckwittery
@artoutlawphoto
@artoutlawphoto 4 года назад
tom ritchey said in a inteview, that only think why the manufactures moved from steel to aluminium in 90's is, the aluminium frames have space for a bigger brand decal.
@BakuPL
@BakuPL 3 года назад
this is amazing
@mincehogan9508
@mincehogan9508 3 года назад
brilliant video and well explained, i am a chef and thick as .... academiclly :) but even i understood it..... what is youre take on Moots bike frames ? do think they would be worth it or just another cycling industry gimmick ?
@jimfarey
@jimfarey 3 года назад
I liked it :). Could you comment on which aluminium frames seem have optimised where to put the mass? Or do you think the idea of putting more carbon mass where it's needed wins? Weighing 100kg I'd happily have a bike weigh an extra kg and cost £1000 less. Maybe aluminium manufacturers trying to go super light have actually screwed themselves. Can you discuss longevity of a mid range aluminium frame vs say a basic Giant TCR or Canyon Ultimate?
@rangersmith4652
@rangersmith4652 2 года назад
I'm 62, well outside the carbon fiber mania demographic, and I've never given in to carbon fiber hype. I've got four aluminum and two steel bikes. None in carbon fiber. Too many bottom bracket issues. No carbon wheels either. I'm trying out a carbon fiber seatpost and have a stem and handlebar on the way, just to see if there's any discernible comfort advantage over aluminum. So far, all I can report about the seatpost is that in spite of applying all right techniques and potions, I'm having a hard time keeping it from slipping down in an aluminum frame. I think it feels good, but that will never overcome the issues with keeping it in place.
@bourzoblaxos13
@bourzoblaxos13 4 года назад
Finally a video on actual composite engineering! Having studied composites it's so frustrating hearing people all of the time treating CFRP as "black aluminium". Really enjoyed your analysis, based on UD laminae, but i'm afraid most manufacturers incorporate alot of woven layers in areas like the bottom bracket and headtube just to get rid off of all the hassle and make the manufacturing a bit easier. Ride on mate!
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 4 года назад
I completely agree with you on the woven stuff. Where the loading and shapes are more complex i think they throw in a load of woven layers and hope for the best. Even 'fanning' them with cuts to cope with complex topography. The number of bikes with sharp creases/folds in their aesthetic design just shows you how many designers dont understand CF.
@occyman
@occyman 3 года назад
Id love this comparison for steel bike... I’ve ridden and raced steel, Alu, carbon and Ti bikes and still own all of them...
@gregschramm8180
@gregschramm8180 3 года назад
Very good
@Surfmus
@Surfmus 3 года назад
Once you go Carbon, you'll never look back.
@lancebiddle3883
@lancebiddle3883 3 года назад
Thanks for the video. Very eye opening! I'm curious how this information applies to smaller companies like Tsubasa whom manufacture their own custom carbon tubes etc.
@dadskills6354
@dadskills6354 4 года назад
Thanks for that plastic plywood nice 👍
@arifazhari7598
@arifazhari7598 3 года назад
After watching this video the only carbon i allowed on my bike is the fork and seat post. As an electrical engineer graduate this is information is easier to digest. I never ever wanna have a full carbon bike Due to "impact sensitivity" . It's easier ot find replacement carbon fork or alloy one with same axle to crown and rake rather than a new frames set. Besides, Lot of carbon components and frame need specific torque setting and we need to bring our mini torque wrench on every ride. And if your metal frame get scratches it won't affect structure integrity unless its steel, you need to cover the scratches if it deep enough to fend off the corrosion of ferrous metal. Looking forward for your analysis on metal material comparison. Not on the technical stiffness or else. Just on the point of conviniece. I guess aluminums is the nice point of balance, good corrosion resistant, stiff enough, light enough and could be shaped more complex other than steel or titanium. Besides we need our bike last long enough until we got "bored" or else. N+1 is always nice to have. And then for people that ride under 12 hour / week bike ride. I doubt you gonna hit fatigue limit on either material in 10 year period. Especially not alot people could produce constant 300 watt power all the time.
@JohnPilling25
@JohnPilling25 3 года назад
I'm a cyclist and a professor of materials engineering (MTU) and you nailed it as far as stiffness in flexure, torsion and tension. Strength in flexure, tension and buckling is a much more difficult subject in laminates, particularly the latter. In comparing aluminium, steel, titanium and carbon what is key in the mechanical design is the ratio of stiffness to density - steel, aluminium and titanium have basically the same ratio and so the frames will be the same weight regardless of the material for the same stiffness it's just that the tube wall thickness will be different, steel the thinnest, aluminium the thickest. Carbon fibre frames will be lighter simply because the density is so low. Most failures in carbon frames occur in bending or buckling and result from delamination - strength of the epoxy - not the carbon! The same arguments can be applied to strength - it's the strength to density ratio that counts and particularly in compression. Carbon is useless in this regard because of delamination. I'd stick with metal and there is little to choose from, from a mechanical perspective, between good steel e.g. reynolds tubing, good aluminium 7075-T6 and Ti-6Al-4V. Cost however is the biggest factor both for the material itself and the cost of machining and fabrication. If cost were no object I'd go for titanium every time (eg MOOTS). For me though I still prefer my vintage (late'80's) american built steel TREK frames though I do own a nice hydroformed aluminium frame (shape can be used to improve stiffness and torsional rigidity of frames much better than changing materials) it's just a pity that most manufacturers use 6061-T651 heat treated window frame extrusion grade at best, rather than aerospace 7075-T6 grades. Keep up the good work.
@PeakTorque
@PeakTorque 3 года назад
John Pilling great comment, thank you. Yea buckling in laminates is something i deliberately left out :) tried to keep it fairly brief. 6061 is cheap and easy to weld but I never use it at work because its just too soft and doesn’t do well with fasteners. 7075 is the go to for me. Cheers
@charliecroker7005
@charliecroker7005 3 года назад
Cheap Carerra frames (Halfords GB) use 7005T6, oddly enough. Dunno why others don't.
@JohnPilling25
@JohnPilling25 3 года назад
@@charliecroker7005 6061 is easier to weld being Al with Mg and Si (hardened with Mg2Si) 7005 is Al with Zn and Mg (hardened with MgZn2) its about 40% stronger. 7075 which contains Zn,Mg Cu is hardened by a range of intermetallics and is about 250% sronger han 6061 (all assuming T6 heat treatment). 6061 is considerably easier to extrude into tubes than 7xxx alloys and cheaper as Si is a common impurity that has to be avoided in 7xxx alloys but is added in 6061. The main source of Si impurities is scrap from Al castings which can contain 6 to 11 % Si. 6005 and 6061 is much easier to hydroform cold than 7xxx alloys. Hence the majority of aluminum used in bike frames is 6xxx. If money were no object I'd go for Ti alloy everytime.
@goodfodder
@goodfodder 4 года назад
Good video, well presented - it’s all marketing. There’s carbon fiber (aero industry) and ‘carbon fiber’ (chinese style) aa found in consumer products, you just have to look at the manufacturer’s warranty small print. Not to mention maintenance; a chipped / scratched ‘carbon fiber’ frame may absorb water if left untreated.
@kiwi_kirsch
@kiwi_kirsch 2 года назад
wow. you explain what i always thought without being able to put into words. the boat builder in my rowing club made me have an idea of how carbon laminate "works" and i always doubted advertising because of that. marry me?
@GVR39
@GVR39 3 года назад
I honestly love them all I ride : aluminum Full Suspension trek trek remedy 8 Kona A SS Aluminum Marine quad 150 SS Steele Frame City 29er Trek Madone Felt z58 Cervelo My race team enjoy them all : once you learn how to ride them all You just enjoy life : ride them all We all have enough life time
@towhee7472
@towhee7472 3 года назад
You are taking away from these people what they do as a hobby: bitch and fight about things on the internet. How dare you!
@GVR39
@GVR39 3 года назад
Tow Hee wow you are angry : lol 😂 ride them all, life is a choice
@slowkuching4190
@slowkuching4190 3 года назад
12 layers cf in the downtube or 2mm thick?? I think most frame don't even have 1mm thickness. So even weaker than this excellent video. Keep up the great work. Thoroughly enjoyed all your videos. Cheers!
@guidodejong1633
@guidodejong1633 4 года назад
You do not mention that the tube cross sectional shape and dimensions have massive influence on stiffness. Carbon gives more freedom here and I would guess this is it's main advantage besides many disadvantages.
@lyan9923
@lyan9923 4 года назад
Guido de jong you can the same for both materials
@guidodejong1633
@guidodejong1633 4 года назад
@@lyan9923 To some extent. But with carbon a better stiffness to weight can be achieved for the complete frame.
Далее
Thru - Axle and QR analysed. Stiffer? Hmm.
20:16
Просмотров 108 тыс.
Cat Corn?! 🙀 #cat #cute #catlover
00:54
Просмотров 4,5 млн
Почему худеют от Оземпик?
00:37
Просмотров 35 тыс.
DoubleSpeak, How to Lie without Lying
16:15
Просмотров 11 млн
Your Carbon Fibre Bike Won’t Last Forever
35:27
Просмотров 481 тыс.
GCN gone mad. Wtf? Don't Slam Your Stem!
9:43
Просмотров 122 тыс.
Why Is Everyone Ditching Gmail?
12:21
Просмотров 996 тыс.
#engineering #diy #amazing #electronic #fyp
0:59
Просмотров 315 тыс.