T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1217.1 | Here's what I know | HPSCAD::CANFIELD | | Fri Jun 23 1989 10:21 | 19 |
| As far as how they are made, all of the Columbus tubing you listed
has a similar composition, but the tubing construction varies greatly
The SL tubing (which is not the "bottom of the line" for Columbus)
is a double butted CRO-MO. The SLX is lighter, but perhaps not
as stiff for strong or heavy riders as th SL. It has a thinner
wall construction with internal ribs which give it added strenght.
The SPX is a heavier and beefier version of the SLX and you usually
find it on larger frame. I don't know much about Ishwata..
Tange offers several grades also, Tange 1, 2 and Prestige. Prestige
being the lightest.
About all I know about Reynold is the the numbers refer to the
composition of the tubing, each of the three numbers mean something,but
I forget what. One of the Bike mags did an article a couple of
years ago and explained most of this stuff. I will try to find
the article.
Does this help.??
quinn
|
1217.2 | FRAME TUBES | RIPPLE::RIVETTS_DA | | Fri Jun 23 1989 11:30 | 20 |
| Reynolds makes a Manganese-Moly tubing in their 531 series. Their
501 series is CRO-MO. In both series there is a straight guage,
single butted, and double butted as with most tubing mfg. In the
double butted tubings there is the regular 531, the 531c competition
which has thinner guage tubes, and the 531p pro. Reynolds also
makes a 753 which I'm not sure exactly what it is.
Ishwata makes a series of CRO-MO tubes they use to make and maybe
still do, 025 single butted, 024 double butted, 022 double butted,
019 double butted, and 015 double butted. The lower the number
the thinner the guage of the tubes. Ishwata also makes carbon steel
tubes and Mangalloy tubes.
Besides the guages in the steel most companies today make the tubing
in "Seemed" and "Seemless". Most of the affordable bikes today
are made out of Seemed tubing. By affordable I mean under $500.
True Temper is making frame tubes also but I don't know what it
is, and Raleigh uses a material they call Technium. Also there
are Aluminum, and Carbon frames.
|
1217.3 | columbus sl/slx/sp/spx | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Jun 23 1989 15:57 | 9 |
| disagree with .1, now where are my specs?
I believe the SL is pretty good for racing. Hell, they used it for
years. SL is double butted. SLX is not lighter than SL. It's the
same as SL plus it has the rifling. SP is double butted and heavier
than SL. SPX is SP plus rifling for additional stiffness. SP & SPX
are used in the larger frames and in track frames.
ed
|
1217.4 | Comparison Update | GSFSWS::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Sat Jun 24 1989 22:53 | 74 |
| This is what I've learned so far. Would anyone care to fill in the rest
of the blanks or provide a category I might have missed?
Cro Moly Framesets M=Moderate E=Expensive VE=Very E
------------------
Manufacturer Price Characteristics Application Labels
------------- ----- --------------- ------------ ---------
Columbus Italian
SL M Double Butted Touring/Racing Pro Bikes
SLX E Double Butted with Racing "
Rifling for stiffness
SP E Heavy Duty Racing/Touring/Heavy "
Double Butted Rider
SPX VE Heavy Duty Racing/Large Frames and "
Double Butted with Heavy Duty Riders
Rifling for stiffness
Ishwata
025 Single butted
024 Double butted
022 Double butted
Thin Gauge
019 Double butted
Thin Gauge
015 Double butted
Very Thin Gauge
Reynolds
501
Tange
No. 1 Japan
No. 2 " "
Prestige Pro Bikes
Manganese-Moly Frame Sets
-------------------------
Reynolds
531 Double Butted Regular
531c Double Butted Competition
531p Double Butted Pro
753 (?)
Carbon Steel Frame Sets
-----------------------
Ishwata
Mangalloy Frame Sets
--------------------
Ishwata
Aluminum Frame Sets
-------------------
Who makes Trek, Cannondale, Klein, Myata and Schwinn Framesets?
Composite Frame Sets
--------------------
Does Raleigh Manufacture Technium?
|
1217.5 | reynolds 753 | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Mon Jun 26 1989 07:53 | 3 |
| 753 is a very thin guage.
ed
|
1217.6 | More data | NAC::KLASMAN | | Mon Jun 26 1989 08:56 | 10 |
| < Note 1217.4 by GSFSWS::JSMITH "I Bike Solo II" >
-< Comparison Update >-
Who makes Trek, Cannondale, Klein, Myata and Schwinn Framesets?
From what I've read, TREK, Cannondale and Klein all make their own Al frames.
And don't forget Tange Super Prestige (or something like that). Even pricier
than Prestige.
|
1217.7 | 022 | LEVERS::LANDRY | | Mon Jun 26 1989 14:05 | 10 |
| >
> 022 Double butted
> Thin Gauge
>
If anyone cares, I've got a bike made with Ishawata 022 and
the sticker claims it's quad-butted.
chris
|
1217.8 | More please? | DEBUG::SCHULDT | Larry Schuldt - WA9TAH | Mon Jun 26 1989 14:54 | 3 |
| How about expanding the chart. I have a bike that used to be built
with Tange Infinity; it's now Columbus Tenax. Neither of these
are in the chart.
|
1217.9 | my 2 cents worth | TOOK::R_WOODBURY | why silver bullets!?!? ... | Mon Jun 26 1989 18:41 | 56 |
| Thought I'd add my $0.02 re: tubing. I'll limit myself to alloy steels
as I don't know much about the "exotics".
Reynolds 753 (pronounced seven-five-three, thank you) is similar in
composition to 531 (five-three-one) but it is heat-treated as well.
That's why Reynolds requires that frame builders be especially
certified to build with it (lower temperatures that silver-soldering
affords are required so the tubing does not lose its characteristics).
It is lighter and thinner than 531 and is not recommended for riders >
130 lbs. The Reynolds 531 straight gauge has a 1.0 mm wall thickness,
the db tubing comes in sets with the wall thickness varying according
to what tube and what the set is for. The standard road set has
1.0-0.7-1.0 mm tubes, I believe, with a single-butted seat tube. The
lighter sets are something like 0.9-0.6-0.9 mm, I think. Reynolds used to
claim that their 531 alloy produced more desirable riding
characteristics than [all the other] CrMo tubings because it had more
spring to it - not entirely a objective opinion, but an opinion none
the less.
Columbus has similar wall thicknesses as Reynolds in their various tube
sets but has the rifling mentioned for additional stiffness. They also
make a straight gauge CrMo tubing which is not generally seen on bikes
in the U.S. There are some new tubesets in the works from Columbus, I
think, not to mention track tubesets.
There is also Super-Vitus, a French made CrMo used on racing machines.
Ishiwata makes more tubing thicknesses than anyone, I think. They [used
to?] have an 011 and an 013 which were for track/pursuit/ride-once and
throw away frames.
All GOOD steel tubing is seamless, otherwise, to be fair, it's pipe.
All of the companies in the chart produce good seamless alloy steel
tubing. Quality control is very expensive to maintain for the top of
the line stuff so there's a premium price associated with it.
It is important to realize that it takes more than a good tubing to
make a good frame. A good racing or touring frame comes from correct
choice of materials, good design, and good workmanship. Certain tubings
like Reynolds 753 are destined for racing frames only. SLX/SPX probably
wouldn't be the first choice for long distance touring framesets.
Sometimes, an experienced frame builder will sucessfully mix tubings.
Remember that the steel is similar for all of these, only there's more
or less of it, and in different parts of the tube, for different
tubesets. All this goes to say that you can't judge a frameset by the
tubing alone. I've ridden a very nice, smooth handling *economy* racing
frame built with Reynolds 531 straight gauge and I've ridden a rough,
unsophisticated medium-priced one built with Ishiwata CrMo double
butted tubing. Don't confuse the tubing with the frame.
French made bikes may be built with slightly smaller diameter tubes as
they are metric sizes (28.0 mm seat tube O.D. as opposed to 1 1/8" =
28.6 mm for others). In the past, it gave them a reputation for being
less stiff (which was probably due to other factors, if it really was
true, and not the tubing).
|
1217.10 | SLX for touring | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Tue Jun 27 1989 00:02 | 9 |
| .-1 sounds like an excellent write-up - thanks.
PS: My newer bike is a 52cm SLX frame, mainly because that's the way
it came, but I think it should make an excellent light-touring frame.
The SLX should add the strength/stiffness to handle some loading
with grace (without the wobblies). As you point out, though, it's
the frame-manship, not just the tubing, that counts.
-john
|
1217.11 | SPX FOR TOURING | AKOV11::FULLER | | Tue Jun 27 1989 09:33 | 13 |
| .-2 SP/SPX is one of the best choices for a touring frameset. Touring
frames need to hold higher weights due to panniers and this tubing
can handle the load, keeping the frame stable at high speeds.
My wife has a Bruce Gordon, one of the best US frame builders, that
strongly recommends SP type tubing in his touring frames.
Also note, there are some well known Japanese tubings that are seamed
chrome moly. This is how higher grades of tubing are getting in
lower priced bikes.
steve
|
1217.12 | True Temper is seamed | CURIE::HUPPERT | | Tue Jun 27 1989 12:03 | 14 |
| re: .9
> All GOOD steel tubing is seamless, otherwise, to be fair, it's pipe.
I believe US made True Temper tubing is also seamed. Ben Serotta used
True Temper in his Colorado model (it was a custom made tubset). The
new Colorado II is all Columbus seamless tubing. I once heard that
Tange Prestige is also seamed, but I'm not sure of that one.
Every once in a while engineers turn a technology upside down and
produce very good products with unusual techniques. True Temper may be
an example of this. In canoes, Mohawk makes many fine boats with a
"spray-on" kind of fiberglassing technique rather than the traditional
lay up method. Specs really don't tell you much.
|
1217.13 | 531 straight-gauge TT tubes; Day & Day (?) | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Is there life after drywall? | Tue Jun 27 1989 12:27 | 17 |
| Let's add:
Reynolds (used to?) make a straight-gauge 531 tubeset where the ends
were the same thin-ness as the center of the tubes. This was designed
for light riders / pursuit / TT bikes, altho the one I saw was
successfully used in some road and criterium races by a REALLY light
rider. The bike was a WITCOMB English machine with the straight tubing,
and a LUGLESS frame. Probably the prettiest job of frame-building I've
seen, except for Albert E's older machines. The WITCOMB was also (by
several POUNDS) the lightest road bike I've ever seen. I seem to recall
that the tubesets weren't available for larger frames (> 23"?).
Also, I have heard of a Japanese tubing brand "Day and Day" and may have
an old Nishiki made of this. Emblem on tubes says Double Butted Chrome -
Moly Tubing and has a sort of laurel wreath design, but no brand. Any
clues? Anyone seen this emblem?
ken
|
1217.14 | MORE INFO | RIPPLE::RIVETTS_DA | | Tue Jun 27 1989 12:48 | 5 |
| Ishwata allows bike companies to put their genric labels on the
frame/fork. I believe Fuji is one company. I believe Fuji uses
Ishwata tubes and they call it Val-lite.
OBTW Tange also makes a seamed CRO-MO 1000, and 900.
|
1217.15 | | EGYPT::CRITZ | Not overweight, just undertall! | Tue Jun 27 1989 13:07 | 5 |
| A little bit of a tangent, but the latest issue of Bicycle
guide tested 4 different frames: Cro-Mo, Carbon fiber,
Aluminum, and Titanium.
Scott
|
1217.16 | it's not True what they say about a seam's Temper? | TOOK::R_WOODBURY | why silver bullets!?!? ... | Tue Jun 27 1989 14:44 | 13 |
| re .12
> Every once in a while engineers turn a technology upside down and
> produce very good products with unusual techniques. True Temper may be
> an example of this.
Your point is well taken, ... I guess a little Euro-centric snobbery on
my part was showing through there. I have three bikes with Columbus
tubing: an SP light tourer/racer, an SLX road racer, and an old (heavy)
straight gauge Atala touring bike - Each one rides great (but for a
different purpose) and I attribute a large part of the excellent rides
to the high quality of the tubing.
|
1217.17 | BE CAREFUL OF ROAD TESTS | AKOV11::FULLER | | Tue Jun 27 1989 15:01 | 8 |
| re: .14
Be careful reading these road tests. It appears that the frame
each writer likes best is one that fits him the best. Who can
say that a bike doesn't steer as smoothly if he is two sizes to big for
the frame (re: one writers opinion of the Kestrel).
steve
|
1217.18 | | EGYPT::CRITZ | Not overweight, just undertall! | Tue Jun 27 1989 15:29 | 6 |
| RE: 17 [RE: 15 (I believe)]
I was most impressed with the titanium frame. Won't rust.
Strong. Now, if they could just get the cost down a little.
Scott
|
1217.19 | Columbus Frame Sticker Chart | GSFSWS::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Mon Jul 17 1989 14:13 | 10 |
| I was in a shop the other day and there was, what looked to be,
a page from a bike mag on the wall (possibly mfg. literature though)
that listed about 20 different kinds of Columbus Tubing, with complete
illustrations of each of the frame labels. Needless to say, I was
overwhelmed by the amount of different materials. The differences
must be very suttle. Anyone know where this Columbus Frame Label
chart came from and where I can get a copy. It kind of reminds me
of a playboy centerfold for bikees :-)
Jerry
|