T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1797.1 | Mine hasn't (knock on wood...) | SCAM::DIAL | | Thu Dec 06 1990 10:51 | 5 |
| My PX-10 is 14 years old now. With about 12 years of fairly regular
riding. The frame (and fork) is Reynolds 531 db.
does that help?
Barry
|
1797.2 | YOU'LL KNOW... | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Thu Dec 06 1990 12:25 | 7 |
| You'll know your frame is worn when you're picking yourself up off
the road :-)....
Regards,
Chip
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1797.3 | You don't NEED a new frame. | ULTRA::BURGESS | Mad man across the water | Thu Dec 06 1990 13:06 | 24 |
| re <<< Note 1797.0 by ULTRA::WITTENBERG "Uphill, Into the Wind" >>>
> -< Do frames wear out? >-
> How long does a bike frame last? Do frames "wear out'? If so, how
> long does it take and how can you tell that the frame is gone?
> I'm mainly interested in steel frames, but discussion of other
> materials might interest others.
I have a 531 frame that is .....errr, older than you are
{betcha} and in at least as good condition {betcha again} (-:, (-:
This isn't a clunker either, about as light as any present day steel
frame is likely to be. I've done double centuries and the Pan Mass on
it in recent years.
Unless you store them in cold damp places and get *_A LOT_*
of condensation inside the tubes and/or crash them, leave scratches to
rust, etc., a good steel frame should outlast you. (I think mine is
going to outlast me.)
"Gone" ? Try the usual flex tests, if it creaks and moans it
probably has a crack or a brazed joint that is opening up.
R
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1797.4 | useful fatigue life | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Thu Dec 06 1990 14:15 | 31 |
|
The replies so far have answered "how long will it last?" in
terms of "how many years?" - rather than "how many miles?"
Somewhere in this Notes conference, I recall, the following
figures were given:
steel - 100,000 miles
aluminum - 50,000 miles
carbon - 25,000 miles? (still new, emerging technology)
Titanium wasn't rated, but probably exceeds steel by a long shot.
These figures represent ageing due to fatigue (not rust or other
corrosion damage, or crashes), and is the mileage after which it
might be best not to trust the frame. It assumes moderately
strenuous use, but not the pounding of a Tour de France.
For some people, the above figures influence which kind of frame
to purchase. For me it has.
Some where after 100,000 on my Fiorelli frame, the downtube started
to crack, whether from endemic corrosion or what (it had not seen
much rain, and had always been kept indoors - at work, at home).
So I retired the bike.
Some people (some racers) feel a frame goes out of tune long before
that, and this was interpreted in a Bicycling article in the last
years as the frame's needing alignment - which some shops or frame-
builders will now perform.
-john
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1797.5 | For what it worth... | NEMAIL::DELORIEA | Resurrect the DEC Bike Club | Thu Dec 06 1990 15:22 | 16 |
| RE> Steel - 100,000 miles
I remember reading in a bike rag the same facts only the measurement was in
cycles not miles. The tests weren't on a frame but on the frame material and
the facts were...
steel - loses stiffness in the first X number of cycles and then reaches a
level of stiffness and it sort of levels off to a long slope of
declining strength.
Aluminum - loses stiffness/strength in a constant manner.
T
|
1797.6 | WHAT'S IN A METAL... | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Thu Dec 06 1990 17:14 | 7 |
| Titanium is advertised as having 4 x's the tensil strength of steel
and 2 x's the fatigue. These characteristics, coupled with the
fact that it is corrosion-proof should provide a long life.
I hope so, I just bought one and they ain't cheap!
Chip
|
1797.7 | It's just a matter of time | TALLIS::JBELL | Zeno was almost here | Thu Dec 06 1990 17:34 | 54 |
| > steel - loses stiffness in the first X number of cycles and then reaches a
> level of stiffness and it sort of levels off to a long slope of
> declining strength.
>
> Aluminum - loses stiffness/strength in a constant manner.
It it true that Aluminum will continue to lose strength, but it takes a
while before the curves diverge. If one cycle is taken to be one
pedal stroke, then in a fifty inch gear, you get 400 cycles per mile.
I'm not a metalurgist.... but I play one in notesfiles.
The graphs that I saw showed steel leveling off after 10^6 cycles.
(roughly 3k miles). From then on, it it suffered very little more fatigue.
Aluminum loss of strength was a straight line when plotted on a log-log
scale. (The same as steel before steel leveled off.) This means that the
the amount of strength lost between 10k miles and 100k miles is the same
percentage as lost between 100 and 1000.
Can anyone feel the difference between a bike that's been ridden 100 miles
and a bike that's been ridden 1000? (It's not a rhetorical question.
Maybe some people can... I don't know.)
---------------------
What about other measures: (I'm guessing at numbers)
Mean time to damaging crash (depends on rider):
Al 10,000 mi
Fe 10,000 mi
Ti 30,000 mi
Mean time to Ireperable crash
Al 10,000 mi (no fixes)
Fe 30,000 mi (cold setable, brazable)
Mean time to corrosion death
Al 100 yr
Fe 30 yr
Ti 1000 yr
Mean time to strip BB threads
Al 50 overhauls
Fe 300 overhauls
Mean time to failure of knees
Al 80 years
Fe 80 years
Ti 80 years
-Jeff Bell
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1797.8 | but the again I just want a new bike | VLASIC::CRANE | | Fri Dec 07 1990 09:18 | 15 |
|
I can feel a definite difference in my steel(crmo) specialized Allez
the first year I rode this bike it was much more resilient in its
reaction to both steering and road stimulus. the feel of the bike has
become more "dead" now than it used t be. I consider this bike to be
at the "Autumn" of its racing days. There is some rust inside the tubes
and there are some creaks beginning to voice their nasty opinions.
I am also hoping to save up enough money to get a Titanium frame for
the summer of '92'. I figure that will be the last fram I buy for a
VERY long while.
John C.
|
1797.9 | Oh Boy, Jello frame. | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Thu Apr 21 1994 17:23 | 15 |
| resurrect an old note...
I have an '88 Trek 1200 with about 25,000 miles, or about half
that of which .4 indicated it should last. There are no stress
fractures in the frame, and I've gone over it pretty thoroughly
[at least the paint isn't cracked anywhere]. I weigh about 200
pounds and make frequent trips up the local mountain, so it sees
some serious torque. Anyhow, when I stand next to the bike, holding
it firmly, and put all my weight on a pedal, the frame moves a good
part of an inch, if not more. In other words, pushing down on one
pedal dramatically moves the lower part of the frame (BB) to the
other side.
Just curious: does anybody else have a semi-hi-mileage aluminum
(this is Alcoa 6061t6; probably not the best) frame that has
begun to turn to jello? Thanks in advance, Kratz
|
1797.10 | Frames aren't made from cast-iron, y'know | JURA::MACFADYEN | time for some action | Fri Apr 22 1994 04:31 | 13 |
| > Anyhow, when I stand next to the bike, holding
> it firmly, and put all my weight on a pedal, the frame moves a good
> part of an inch, if not more.
So, you weigh 200lb, and you put all your weight on one pedal while
holding the bike firmly, and the bottom bracket moves a good part of an
inch? You should try that with my bike sometime and then you won't feel
so bad.
Are you happy with the way the bike rides?
Rod
|
1797.11 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Apr 22 1994 06:50 | 11 |
| Or mine! I go about 165lbs and can swish the BB around (but that's
due to the immortal powers I possess... Ya).
Aluminum has very unforgiving movement. It won't soften, it'll
crack. It certainly won't get "mushy" without tell tale (visible)
signs of fatigue. Is it possible you had just never noticed it
before?
Ohhh, are looking for an excuse to buy a new frame???? :-)
|
1797.12 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Fri Apr 22 1994 14:08 | 8 |
| re .last few
Thanks for replying. The bike now creaks pretty badly under lots
of torque [embarrassingly so], and I don't remember it ever being
as "mushy". But I've had a cracked frame on another bike, and that
was pretty obvious. Maybe I am just trying to justify a new Ti frame.
Alas, Mr. tax man ensured that won't be happening anytime soon. ;-(
Thanks again, Kratz
|
1797.13 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Apr 22 1994 14:19 | 12 |
| I owned and raced a C Dale that creaked. It wasn't the frame at all.
The funny thing about it was it sounded like it was coming from all
areas of the frame that it (actually) wasn't.
The seat post/seat tube was the culprit. Even my Merlin was creaking
to beat the band after the monsoon race in Marblehead. I just pulled
the stem, wiped off the crap and re-greased it... Silent!
Sorry to hear about Uncle Sam bein' so tight (not like him, eh? - Ya
right!)...
Maybe next year...
|
1797.14 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Thu Jul 06 1995 17:05 | 16 |
| I recently bought a "used" Trek 1200 from Ron Pleva in Jersey
and thought I'd revisit my note in .9. Ron's 1200 is
essentially a carbon copy (aluminum copy?) of my other 1200:
same size, same aluminum frame, same color,... the main
difference my old 1200 has about 20,000 miles more than Ron's.
Anyhow, keeping everything else equal (same wheels, etc) the
difference in terms of riding is *absolutely* amazing: Ron's
1200 responds instantly and is at least 1mph faster; my old
1200's frame moans and groans as it squishes under torque.
No visible signs of unbonding or cracks either.
Perhaps this degradation is peculiar to aluminum, or maybe the
particular aluminum alloy used in this frame, but frames can indeed
"wear out".
Kratz
|
1797.15 | Steel forever, aluminum for a while | PATE::SOLON | | Fri Jul 21 1995 13:45 | 15 |
| Steel is unique because if stressed to less than 50% of its limit,
it has an infinite endurance limit. Aluminum, like other metals,
fatigue. The rate is a function of the stress load vs. the limit load.
I was surprised(?) to learn that a standard maintenance procedure for
airplanes is to measure the length of the cracks in the aluminum skin.
When they reach a specified length, the panel is replaced (we hope)!
Endurance limit is defined by number of cycles and stress level.
For a bicycle, load/unload cycle would include pedaling and just
bouncing over bumps. 20K miles could rack up a lot more cycles.
Without getting too technical, fatigue can show up as "softening", not
just cracks.
Regards,
Tom
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