Home Forums Bike Forum Irrational fear of Carbon?

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  • Irrational fear of Carbon?
  • Dimmadan
    Free Member

    Same in field hockey. I'm a forward and have to have a stick as stiff as I can get it, hence the £200+ price tags (not for me as I am sponsored 😆 )

    rolfharris
    Free Member

    Carbon is pretty good. I trust it as much as any metal, and like the idea that if there's a break it can be repaired for £40 or so- unlike an alu frame which is to an extent unrepairable.

    I've never cracked anything in my life, though.

    Wookster
    Full Member

    Blimey has any one actually read these posts befroe commenting on busted carbon

    "I walked away from being T-boned by a car. Pity i don't have the pic of the left pedal, it got sheared in two"

    "Mou sent me these photos of the broken fork on his Tank Matrix. I'm not sure exactly what happened, but it involved a Toyota"

    FFS any light frame will be mashed up if hit by a car Carbon is not as Sh**E as it made out, its used on stuff from jet fightes to F1 cars. Also a lot of these are light or cheap road bikes, I dont have an issue with carbon worked on carbon Yachts seen them take huge impacts. By the same reasoning you build really light ie only strenghten in areas where known loading will happen ie BB head tunbe and it gets a Toyota in the down tube then it will go.

    Plus your scaring me just got a mojo!!!! 😯 8)

    Wookster
    Full Member

    my new favorite!!!

    [The rider of this trek was passing a truck that was turning left, and another car turned left in front of the truck, and hit the rider]

    tangobravo
    Free Member

    carbon swimming to you heart it complete and utter crap.

    And thats all i have to add to this

    compositepro
    Free Member

    it must be true if it were ont tinternet..

    I've built up a CF 6" AM bike and have no worries at all about it's strength

    njee20
    Free Member

    That is why people often have to limbs amputated after crashes on carbon bikes.

    What the **** are you on about? Find me a pro rider (and they've basically all ridden carbon for a number of years) who's had a limb amputated as a direct result of a carbon-related incident.

    Those fish that swim up your piss is total rubbish too, urban myth. There are some tools around!

    Kramer
    Free Member

    I think BigDummy knows quite a bit about fishing. 😉

    Dougal
    Free Member

    Carbon vs ally vs hammer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-lsDXEEUlRE

    Ally comes off looking pretty bad here.

    BigDummy
    Free Member

    Pro riders have access to better medical facilities and can often get the specialist help they need quickly enough that amputation is not necessary. It's the amateur riders that you need to be worrying about. But the bike manufacturers make huge payouts to people who lose limbs, or their widows, to buy their silence because the market in carbon fibre bike components is so huge. The Trek Corporation apparently spent nearly 6.3% of its budget on hushing this scandal up in 2003.

    Like I say, this may not be true, but it was on the internet. 🙂

    IanMunro
    Free Member

    Those fish that swim up your piss is total rubbish too, urban myth. There are some tools around!
    Maybe you're right, but would you really stick your dick in a jam jar with one of these in and have a piss?

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQWgUht-ObI

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    sootyandjim and dimmadan,

    The stiffer stick may feel better/faster, but the evidence shows you can obtain higher puck speeds with the lower modulous sticks. Unless you have papers showing otherwise I give you:

    The influence of shaft stiffness on potential energy and puck speed during wrist and slap shots in ice hockey

    Journal Sports Engineering

    Publisher Springer London
    ISSN 1369-7072 (Print) 1460-2687 (Online)
    Issue Volume 9, Number 4 / December, 2006
    DOI 10.1007/BF02866057
    Pages 191-200
    Subject Collection Engineering
    SpringerLink Date Wednesday, March 26, 2008

    J. T. Worobets1 Contact Information, J. C. Fairbairn1 and D. J. Stefanyshyn1
    (1) Human Performance Laboratory, The University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive NW, T2N 1N4 Calgary, Alberta, Canada

    Abstract:
    The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between hockey stick shaft stiffness and puck speed with mechanical energy considerations during stationary wrist and slap shots. Thirty left-handed pro-model composite hockey sticks, submitted by eleven hockey stick manufacturers, were subjected to a mechanical cantilever bend test to determine the shaft stiffness of each stick. Eight sticks representing the entire spectrum of stiffnesses were then used by five elite male hockey players to perform stationary wrist and slap shots in a laboratory setting. Eight infra-red high-speed digital video cameras were used to capture shaft deformation and puck speed. A second mechanical test then replicated the loading patterns applied to each stick during shooting. Force-deformation data from this test were used to determine the shaft stiffness and potential energy storage and return associated with each stick during shooting. The results of this study suggest that shaft stiffness has an influence on puck speed in wrist but not slap shots. During a wrist shot, a given player should realise higher puck speeds with a stick in which they store increased elastic potential energy in the shaft. In general, flexible sticks were found to store the most energy. However, how the athlete loads the stick has as much influence on puck speed as stick construction. Energy considerations were unable to explain changes in puck speed for the slap shot. For this type of shot it is the athlete and not the equipment influencing puck speed, but the governing mechanisms have yet to be elucidated.

    That paper is for ice hockey by the way, no idea how it relates to field hockey but suspect the principle is the same. And if you play with a stick handed own from your dad I suspect your at a different level to the guys we were talking to, we were looking at sticks per game not generations per stick!

    Kramer
    Free Member

    What about an irrational love of carbon. And titanium. To be frank, it's almost a fetish.

    compositepro
    Free Member

    are you sure the 6.3% was just spent on hushing up carbon s migratory patterns or the fact that in america if another human being farts near you its easier to settle out of court than in.

    like for example the average uneducated joe that puts his forks in backwards then goes for a claim…JRA has a completely different meaning over there

    hora
    Free Member

    Trouble is, carbon shatters on impact, producing shards. If you get the shards embedded in you they are barbed, so they migrate through your bloodstream towards your heart. That is why people often have to limbs amputated after crashes on carbon bikes.

    This isnt the first time BigDummy has shown himself to be really funny…tsk tsk

    Dimmadan
    Free Member

    thisisnotaspoon i was refering to field hockey where a plastic vball is struck rather than a puck.

    twohats
    Free Member

    TandemJeremy – Member

    Me – I have it. Its the catastrophic failure mode that upsets me. Not just frames but any carbon component. Has no place on a MTB in my book.

    *tries to imagine a place that was run according to TJ's book!*

    *Shudders*

    Blimey has any one actually read these posts befroe commenting on busted carbon

    "I walked away from being T-boned by a car. Pity i don't have the pic of the left pedal, it got sheared in two"

    "Mou sent me these photos of the broken fork on his Tank Matrix. I'm not sure exactly what happened, but it involved a Toyota"

    Yep, seems the majority of failures on there are of lightweight road bikes that have either hit a car, or been involved in some other sort of accident.

    I bet a blog site called "busted steel/aluminium would get a bit dull with the sheer amount of broken parts that would fill page after page…

    STATO
    Free Member

    But the bike manufacturers make huge payouts to people who lose limbs, or their widows, to buy their silence because the market in carbon fibre bike components is so huge.

    If the risk is so huge why are they making prosthetic limbs from carbon fiber? those people have already lost part of a limb so why are they risking the rest of it and (if we believe you) their life to have a slightly lighter or higher performance prosthetic arm/leg. They are used by disabled athletes who must surely damage them (as we are taliking about a piece of performance sports equipment) so you'd think they would be banned from this area of competition?

    njee20
    Free Member

    That'd be ironic wouldn't it. You've had your legs lopped off because your frame snapped or sommat, then they offer you some carbon legs instead.

    Carbon seems to work alright for Oscar Pistorious!

    Trek… 6.3%… really? No, I didn't think so!

    compositepro
    Free Member

    i think the original post was a scaredy post over on some other forum (mtbr springs to mind)i remember reading it but im sure it was the fact that the ER folks had not removed all the foreign objects from the acccident site an interesting point though is that it could have been any foreign object and just because it happened to be carbon fibre and a bike accident it has become legend

    forgot to ask if anyone knows what heart valves are made from

    njee20
    Free Member

    The body is extremely good at expelling foreign matter anyway! When I munched my knee last year there were still bits of gravel 'surfacing' under the scar tissue months later, kept having to dig them out.

    A friend of mine fell on a pool cue, which went through his t-shirt and into his armpit. About 18 months later he got a black 'spot' on top of his shoulder, he squeezed it and pulled out the piece of t-shirt that'd be pushed in the bottom. Disgusting, but quite cool!

    cynic-al
    Free Member

    The whole cf/amputation thing is hushed up in the fishing world too.

    Also note that F1 drivers' suits are kevlar to stop any CF piercing the body.

    NASA engineers have spent years working on "non barbed" CF in order to get over this issue. No successes so far, and a few of their guys are now amputees after a breakage in the lab and someone accidentally switching the air con into reverse.

    sootyandjim
    Free Member

    thisisnotaspoon – Whilst I've no doubt the science may prove a flexier stick is 'better' the science can't take into account the feel nor do bench tests take into account the real world use of stiffer sticks and whilst my level of experience may be dwarfed by that of the pros (oh and thanks for the particularly condescending way you put it) my limited experience still speaks volumes of the ice hockey scene at large.

    Many pros stay with what they were brought up with because it feels right and as I said, thats something that can't be measured and feeling 'right' when you're playing is often far more important than the results of a bench test in a lab. The measurement of your sticks stiffness is the last thing on your mind when you are barreling along the boards looking for someone to lay the puck off.

    MrAgreeable
    Full Member

    Those fish that swim up your piss is total rubbish too, urban myth. There are some tools around!

    Hmmm…

    Do not click if squeamish

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    Has anyone tested various sticks in field hockey? I'd be very supprised if the stiffer sticks were the faster ones.

    anecdotal evidence abnd feel are uselless in this case, the pro's in the study (and the ones we spoke to) were all convinced that theyr super stiff sticks were the fastest.

    Kramer
    Free Member

    cynic-al the problem with the NASA non-barbed carbon fibre, is that it doesn't bond well with the glue, and so tends to fall off the space shuttle. Certainly not enough structural integrity to make a frame out of yet. 🙄

    TerryWrist
    Free Member

    I work in a hospital and I've heard about the CF barbs, not sure if I can dig out stats but I'll have a look.

    Mostly from fishing poles in this country.

    Kramer
    Free Member

    My friend is an A&E consultant. I think that there's an upcoming conference on the management of Carbon Fibre trauma that he's going to. 😉

    jimmerhimself
    Free Member

    The only issues I've heard of regarding CF are to do with inhaling it when cutting it or dealing with burned CF after an aircraft crash.

    With regards to bikes, my main concern is the seeming lack of any clear information from most frame manufacturers regarding the composition of the CF and the manufacturing processes used. All CF is not equal! It is also a relatively new technology to bikes so the best way to go about making a component that will last will not be well known to all manufacturers.

    I've run CF bars on one of my bikes for three years and I really can't fault them. I've had an aluminium road bike with carbon seat stays fail on me and it was the aluminium that failed not the carbon.

    In the context of mountain bikes though, the main reason I'd not buy a CF frame is because it is not a thoroughly tried or tested technology. I remember the early days of aluminium frames and it wasn't pretty, however as others have mentioned CF is potentially a far more suitable material for building bike frames out of than aluminium.

    benjag
    Free Member

    plenty of good info here ibis[/url] and i'm only slightly biased!! btw I'm 100kg and will be taking the mojo to Les Gets in a week, not worried in the slightest.

    avdave2
    Full Member
    avdave2
    Full Member
    njee20
    Free Member

    Those fish do exist, but they enter when you're up to your nuts in water, they don't swim up your urine which is what some people seem to think!

    clubber
    Free Member

    it is not a thoroughly tried or tested technology

    Disagree with that actually. We're now at a point where carbon has been tried and tested – with some poor results in the past – and lessons learnt. Carbon bikes have been out there for the best part of 20 years now, this isn't a new technology. You only need to see the number of good quality, relatively cheap carbon bikes that are out there now to see that.

    samuri
    Free Member

    Carbon. Material of Champions.

    I didn't die on my ride on a set of carbon forks last night but I suppose it's only a matter of time.

    spacemonkey
    Full Member

    Hmm, great timing this thread … I've just got back on the road with a warranty replacement Carbon Stumpy after breaking my S-Works Enduro. If it all gets a bit much I'll resign myself to biking round the garden … ah, the neurotic joy of paranoia …

    SM

    racefaceec90
    Full Member

    i must admit,i have had some paranoia about breaking my 08 s works carbon hardtail!!!had been thinking of p/xing the frame,but came to the conclusion that i would trust specialized to warranty the frame!!!also run ec90 flat easton carbon bars,but am not so worried about breaking those!!!

    crikey
    Free Member

    It is also a relatively new technology to bikes

    Armstrong won the Tour in 1999 on a Trek OCLV carbon bike.

    Look at your fingers, (ignore your thumbs if you're from Bacup) that's ten years ago.

    How long do we have to use it for?

    colnagokid
    Full Member

    Samuri, you do realise that as its a Columbia rider, the failure of his frame is the fault of the Garmin team? 😉
    Carbon fibre dont scare me! Its Ti bolts I dont like

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 122 total)

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