T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2073.1 | More data.... | FSOA::KGRIFFITH | | Wed Sep 11 1991 16:59 | 15 |
| I recently had the opportunity to go to Wisconson to the TREK facility
for the 1992 product kick off. The 52/5500's are oversized carbon
tubed frames with carbon fiber lugs and forks. They seem to be much
stronger and stiffer that Kestrels. They are amazingly rigid and
comfortable at the same time. Retail suggested prices are approx $2000
for the 5200 and $3000 for the 5500.
As a side note almost everyone that rode them fell in love with the
feel of the bike. At 225 pounds I couldn't notice any appreciable
frame flex. 3 guys from the shop I work in have put their bikes on the
market so that they can buy 5200's.
...keith
|
2073.2 | what kind of fork? | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Wed Sep 11 1991 17:08 | 9 |
|
A friend just bought a 2100, and described the 2500 as having
carbon-fibre tubing (aluminum lugs) throughout, including fork.
What kind of fork are they using? Not an EMS, I'm sure...
(As for the 5000 series, it sounds interesting!)
-john
|
2073.3 | a little off the subject | AD::CRANE | I'd rather be on my bicycle | Wed Sep 11 1991 17:59 | 13 |
|
While we are on the subject of Carbon Fiber.
Has anybody managed to wear out a Carbon Fiber frame?
I finally have the cash to go out and get a new frame and
the durability of Carbon Fiber over the long haul is a major
concern of mine. My current steel frame has six years of very
hard riding on it.
John C.
|
2073.4 | carbon durability | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Thu Sep 12 1991 08:56 | 12 |
|
At present, I don't plan to push the Kestrel to exhaustion.
Sorry, I'm just not enough at ease with the material's durability.
(I'll put the bigger miles on the steel bikes.)
Short-term durability: it seemed so out-of-place to see a brilliant
white Kestrel with fenders, lights, wires, all sorts of electrical
tape, etc., doing PBP, but there was one there like that - Art Crowley's
from the NYC area. But when you think of it, the material should
give good comfort on long rides like those.
-john
|
2073.5 | Sort of. | WMOIS::FLYE_N | | Fri Sep 13 1991 06:53 | 9 |
| RE: .3
I pulled the chainstay off the bottom bracket shell on my
Specialized Allez Epic. This problem was a glue failure. They solved
the problem on the new frames.
Norm
|
2073.6 | :-) | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Sep 20 1991 09:11 | 5 |
| Mine's been on order for almost a week...
Haven't had a NEW bike in soooo loooong.
ed
|
2073.7 | Saw them... | CTHQ3::JENIN::FRERE | Ellas Danzan Solas | Mon Sep 23 1991 13:02 | 7 |
| VERY Nice!!
Will be a hot seller!!
Eric
(Better than their tandem intros...)
|
2073.8 | OCLV | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Thu Mar 19 1992 06:44 | 16 |
| April's Bicycling has an article comparing the 5500 to the Kestrel 200
(?). Their 58cm 5500's frame is 2.58 lbs, .09 lbs lighter than the
comparable Kestrel. They say it's as stiff as anything short of SLX
and not as soft a ride as they';ve become accustomed to getting from
Carbon fiber.
Btw, the OCLV is for the Optimally Compressed Low Volume Lugs,
apparently wrapping carbon fiber causes minute air spaces between the
fibres leading to [ohmigawd] softness. By Optimally squishing out the
air, the frame is stiffened. Also the lugs extend a goodly way into
the tubes.
Read all about it in April Bicycling -- you know, the one with the
ads for the March Super Sale and Schwinn Madness sale.
ed
|
2073.9 | FOUL! in my opinion... | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Thu Mar 19 1992 11:58 | 8 |
| I read it and personally thought that a comparitive analysis
(exercise) ought to have a fairly consistent population (sorry,
it's the engineering in me)...
Kestrel is in a much different class... Maybe bumping it up against
Look's or Trimble's might be a more on the even...
Chip
|
2073.10 | what's 'class' got to do with it? | WUMBCK::FOX | | Thu Mar 19 1992 13:34 | 5 |
| Why is it a bad comparison? If the frames are priced about the same,
and are meant for the same type of riding/racing (roughly equal
frame geometries), it shouldn't matter.
John
|
2073.11 | NOT QUITE (CLASS IS EVERYTHING)! | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Thu Mar 19 1992 14:29 | 9 |
| Uhhhh, the price ain't even close... The style and aesthetics
aren't either (in my opinion). Performance would be a tough
one to judge (since I've never been on a TREK).
My guess would be judging from the frame only price of the
Kestrel (2290) compared to the finished bike prices of both,
there will be a DIFFERENCE...
Chip
|
2073.12 | KESTREL 4000? | AKOCOA::FULLER | | Thu Mar 19 1992 14:55 | 13 |
| Has anyone compared the Kestrel 4000 (1989 model with Spectra and not
produced any more) with the newer Kestrel's either EMS or SC's?
I do believe, although cannot substantiate since haven't ridden the
newer models that the 4000 was a stiffer frame. I know mine is a
super climber and decender (stiff top tube). In addition, the look
of the 4000 is certainly an eye catcher.
Also any knowledge on breakage of older frames? I don't wish to part
with my 4000 for a long time.
steve
|
2073.13 | NOT TO WORRY... | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Mar 20 1992 06:15 | 5 |
| If you can believe them... I've read that Kestrel states their
repairs are nearly exclusively from accidents. They note a particular
cause of damage being from repair stand clamps...
Chip
|
2073.14 | | IOSG::ELLISJ | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Fri Mar 20 1992 06:21 | 4 |
|
RE: "from repair stand clamps"
The cure worse than the disease, eh?
|
2073.15 | Trek 5500 vs. Kestrel 200 EMS | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Wed Apr 22 1992 09:12 | 50 |
|
Catching up on my reading, I've gotten to the April, 1992 issue
of Bicycling, and their head-to-head review of :
Trek 5500 vs. Kestrel 200 EMS
As with any review (movie, book, riding lawnmowers...) you can take
this one with a grain of salt (especially since the reviewer, a Cat 3
racer, has been using a Kestrel 200 EMS for some time), but some high
points:
o Stiffness - Trek is stiffer (less lateral flex by .1 inch or
so, as measured with their equipment) - so stiff that it loses
the famous carbon fibre shock absorption - for which Kestrel,
et al., are well known. Trek's stiffness compared with SLX's.
"Big bruiser" racers may appreciate the Trek's added stiffness
on sprints or all-out climbs; everyone might well prefer the
Kestrel's silky (but not mushy) ride.
o Fork Stiffness - A footnote is that the Kestrel EMS fork absorbs
shock better and yet has better lateral rigidity (a plus). The
EMS forks, by the way, find their way to Titanium and other bikes.
o Aesthetics - ...are in the eye of the beholder, right? But
distinctions include: Kestrel has aero-shaped tubing (including
the fork), in-tube routed cabling (cleaner appearance), etc.
o Weight - the Trek frame & fork is lighter by several ounces;
the built-up bikes as spec'd make the Trek lighter by more than
a pound.
There was also a critique of components (Dura-Ace in both cases, with
variants), but to my mind (and to some extent the reviewer's) this is
inconsequential - people buying bikes at that level will spec them
individually, if they have any problem with the delivered components.
Bottom line from the reviewer was the Kestrel was the more refined,
"nicer" bike (with the exception of those who want an SLX frame in
carbon fibre) but the price differential you pay for all this is $800.
NB: I'd be curious comparing the Trek 5x00 with a Kestrel 200 SC -
the SC is not quite as light, but same monocoque construction, and
significantly less expensive. (The article said Kestrel would like
you to compare the Trek 5x00's with the Kestrel 190i - a lugged frame
like the Trek's.)
Now the suspense builds as we await a ride report from our in-house
reviewer... Ed "Stable of Bikes" Fisher. :-)
-john
|
2073.16 | I like it, but I'm not much of a reviewer... | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Wed Apr 22 1992 09:37 | 8 |
| I like my Treks, especially the 5500. Have even commuted on it.
I thought the "several ounces" was "less than 2". It compares
favorably with my SLX frames and my aluminum Trek 2000.
Haven't noticed any "harshness" yet but about all I've ever ridden
is SLX.
ed
|
2073.17 | VERY nice | WILBRY::HORN | Steve Horn, Database Systems | Wed Apr 22 1992 14:15 | 12 |
|
Well Ed let me ride his 5500 yesterday on a short lunch time ride...8^)
I only went a couple miles but felt it had a very silky ride...yet when
one stomped on the pedals it responded instantly. A very nice ride.
I liked the STI enough that I think I'll start saving my pennies for
the Campy Ergos for my Bianchi. Yes, poor me, back to my all Campy
Bianchi (SL)...8^(
Shouldn't have let myself ride it!
|
2073.18 | Catalogue sizing correct? | LEGUP::SHORTT | John Shortt / DTN: 266-4594 | Fri May 01 1992 09:46 | 10 |
|
Ed,
I noticed in the catalogue that the c-to-c of the 5x00's ran around 3
cm less than the frame size. Did you yourself moving up a size from
say the 2000? If so, do you find you are stretched out a bit more? For
me, I could use the 58 cm (55.x c-c), and get a considerably longer top
tube, vs. the 56 cm 1400 I have now.
john
|
2073.19 | | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri May 01 1992 14:20 | 5 |
| I think the 3cm differnce is just because of the much fatter tubes. I
ususally ride 55cm C-C and bought a 56cm C-T 5500, and find it to be
quite compatible.
ed
|
2073.20 | Lightening strikes the 5500. | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Wed Aug 26 1992 15:09 | 12 |
| The latest Bicycling (October?) has a Lightened 5500. They took
4 lbs off it to get it down to 15+.
They say that they did not go for all out weight reduction (this time)
because they wanted it to still be raceable. By using a combination of
Ti and other light weight components including down tube shifters,
gl330 tubs, 15/17/15 spokes and a single bottle cage.
They didn't mention whether or not the tires were inflated or
if they used dry air to inflate them.
ed
|
2073.21 | EMS fork? | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Thu Aug 27 1992 13:46 | 11 |
|
RE: tire inflation... remember Fina's "pink air" from a few years back?
The article is interesting - I like their approach - lightweight but
robust. I thought I remembered that you could get an EMS fork for the
Trek (no, I guess it was a titanium bike like a Merlin that offered
that)... but in any case, if you did swap out their alu fork for the
EMS, wouldn't that save more weight? I guess that's not fair, since
Trek would never offer that configuration.
-john
|
2073.22 | what is it anyway? | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Thu Aug 27 1992 14:37 | 3 |
| hmmm, I thought my fork was CF. No?
ed
|
2073.23 | try the thumbnail test | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Fri Aug 28 1992 12:12 | 8 |
|
You should know, Ed. May have been a careless assumption on my part.
The one they showed in the article (and ones I've seen in shops) are
spindly forks, that look like aluminum unicrown. But I've never tapped
on one. I assumed a carbon fiber fork would need to be beefier (though
still ending up lighter), like the Kestrel's.
-john
|
2073.24 | stem stress fracture | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Mon Jun 17 1996 16:19 | 5 |
| FWIW: the Control Tech stem on my '94 5500 developed a hairline crack
near the top of the headset, to be replaced by Trek for no charge.
Glad it didn't fail all the way thru; looked like it was just a
matter of time. Just last weekend it was up to 50mph.
Kratz
|
2073.25 | | STOWOA::SWFULLER | | Tue Jun 18 1996 09:36 | 8 |
| re. 24
I believe there was a recall on this stem. Unfortunately it is
difficult to keep track of recalls without the tracking like auto
manufacturers. Recently it seems that there have been a lot of them,
especially front forks.
steve
|