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#1
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Why no polished aluminum frames?
When I bought my first quality MTB, I bought a Mongoose Rockadile SX, which
had a polished aluminum frame. The shops were full of shiny polished frames, both road and MTB. My head tube cracked, due to my neglect, so I was forced to buy a new frame. NOBODY offers a polished frame. Is this a matter of the frames being too labor intensive, or just a matter of fashion? Shame, because I think it's a nice look, especially when it's freshly washed and polished. |
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#2
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Why no polished aluminum frames?
Gooserider wrote:
When I bought my first quality MTB, I bought a Mongoose Rockadile SX, which had a polished aluminum frame. The shops were full of shiny polished frames, both road and MTB. My head tube cracked, due to my neglect, so I was forced to buy a new frame. NOBODY offers a polished frame. Is this a matter of the frames being too labor intensive, or just a matter of fashion? Shame, because I think it's a nice look, especially when it's freshly washed and polished. It's probably both. It does cost more to polish a frame than to paint it. But if the public demanded it, bike makers would find a way to offer it. Polishing does seem to come and go. I've even seen a few half-painted, half-polished frames lately. Matt O. |
#3
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Why no polished aluminum frames?
Matt O'Toole wrote:
Gooserider wrote: When I bought my first quality MTB, I bought a Mongoose Rockadile SX, which had a polished aluminum frame. The shops were full of shiny polished frames, both road and MTB. My head tube cracked, due to my neglect, so I was forced to buy a new frame. NOBODY offers a polished frame. Is this a matter of the frames being too labor intensive, or just a matter of fashion? Shame, because I think it's a nice look, especially when it's freshly washed and polished. It's probably both. It does cost more to polish a frame than to paint it. But if the public demanded it, bike makers would find a way to offer it. Polishing does seem to come and go. I've even seen a few half-painted, half-polished frames lately. Matt O. My Marin Larkspur (2001 editon?) had a nice brushed aluminum frame with a plastic coat. Looked good. I peeled the decals off just to improve the look. I liked it. Don't they do that any more? Bernie |
#4
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Why no polished aluminum frames?
In article ,
"Gooserider" writes: When I bought my first quality MTB, I bought a Mongoose Rockadile SX, which had a polished aluminum frame. The shops were full of shiny polished frames, both road and MTB. My head tube cracked, due to my neglect, so I was forced to buy a new frame. NOBODY offers a polished frame. Is this a matter of the frames being too labor intensive, or just a matter of fashion? Shame, because I think it's a nice look, especially when it's freshly washed and polished. Just a guess on my part, but maybe it's done so after-sales painting of the frame is an option left to the buyer, and powdercoat sticks better to brushed aluminum? cheers, Tom -- -- Powered by FreeBSD Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats [curlicue] vcn [point] bc [point] ca |
#5
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Why no polished aluminum frames?
"Gooserider" wrote in message . com...
NOBODY offers a polished frame. -------- I'd guess its a combination of labor, exposing every imperfect weld, and people complained about fingerprints. Along those lines though, is anyone aware of a shop anywhere that could strip the paint off a frame, brush it, and anodize it to prevent oxidation? The paint on my tandem is ok, but seems to chip pretty easily, exposing a reddish primer. I would just as soon plan to strip it and leave it bare someday.... sources? d |
#6
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Why no polished aluminum frames?
dan baker wrote:
"Gooserider" wrote in message . com... NOBODY offers a polished frame. -------- I'd guess its a combination of labor, exposing every imperfect weld, and people complained about fingerprints. All these things, but mostly labor. It *does* cost a lot to polish a frame. Most factory polished frames are then clearcoated too, to prevent fingerprints and oxidation. Along those lines though, is anyone aware of a shop anywhere that could strip the paint off a frame, brush it, and anodize it to prevent oxidation? The paint on my tandem is ok, but seems to chip pretty easily, exposing a reddish primer. I would just as soon plan to strip it and leave it bare someday.... You could do all these things yourself, except the anodizing. Chemical strippers (try an aircraft or marine supply store) are the best/fastest way to remove paint. From there, you could polish it yourself using something like Simichrome or Met-all, or "brush" it with steel wool. Some small frame makers would sell you a plain polished frame, and tell you to use steel wool or metal polish to maintain its appearance. This "self-maintainable" finish was a selling point, especially in the early days of mountain biking when bikes were expensive and would get beat up a lot. b Metal polish has wax/silicone in it to prevent oxidation, and it works pretty well. I've stripped and polished a couple of frames, and a whole lot of sailboat parts. It's a lot of work, but once it's done, it's easy to maintain. Anodizing is cheap in large quantities, but for one-offs it's quite expensive -- perhaps more than a good paint job, and certainly more than powdercoat. GT sold anodized MTB frames for a long time. Some were clearcoated over the anodizing, some not. Santa Cruz sells both anodized and polished -- and polished costs extra. Matt O. |
#7
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Why no polished aluminum frames?
Aluminum CAN and does oxidize over time, although more slowly than
steel. Typically it will take on a dull look and white powdery oxide forms on its surface. I suppose if you keep it shiny and well-polished, the oxide formation will be minimal. However, that approach is not typical of most bike owners. |
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