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Wait 'til you feel the difference that reticular titanium mesh makes!
Faster than any other fork, with a combination of extreme lateral stiffness, vertical compliance, and absorption of high frequency road buzz that create a fork unmatched in its performance! Listen to the unsolicited testimony from our riders: "You are just a fred. But if you get this fork, I may not knock you off your bike as I pass you." - Fabrizzio Mazzoleni "Go Fabs, go!" - Ryan Cousineau "I wish I could come up with a good troll for this post." - F. Golightly "A haiku: Carbon fork Titanium mesh Reticular the ad said Faster, in my head" - Carl Fogel "insert your favorite bizarre rant here" - That freaky dude who puts up those freaky posts no one understands (you know who I am talking about) App |
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(Carl Fogel) wrote in message . com...
Dear Rik, I think that the original question was whether these carbon Columbus Muscle Forks "break easily," not whether carbon forks in general last a long time as long as you don't break them in a crash. That is, what happens if you pop a pair of these Columbus Muscle Forks in a vise and whack 'em with a hammer to simulate a crash or wiggle 'em to mimic ordinary riding stresses? Do the Columbus forks bust more easily than other brands of carbon forks or any kind of metal forks? Like Dave, I appreciate your feedback, which suggests that carbon forks in general survive ordinary riding (but don't crash). That may be what Dave wanted to know, but he might have been wondering if these Columbus Muscles forks are the Ford Pinto of the carbon fork world, too thin, too fragile, or somehow badly designed. Carl Fogel The following is from http://www.framebuilding.com/carbon%20forks.htm although I dont specifically know how it compares to the testing performed on carbon forks from other manufactures. ASTM standards call for a load of 170 lbs. applied perpendicular to the steering axis, both pushing and pulling for 50,000 cycles without failure. The information below seems to suggest that the Columbus forks exceed this. -----------0--------- Columbus carbon forks are produced in accordance with ISO 9000. All forks are marked and their history can be traced. The tests include destruction testing and are performed on finished product samples. They are very seve * Frontal and side strength test: A load of 200 N is first applied to the frontal part and then to the side part of the fork. The flex is measured on each occasion and this must not exceed a set value. * Shock Test: A mass of 250 N is dropped from a height of 430mm on a properly restrained fork. In order to pass the test the fork must resist without breakage or residual deformation. * Static Test: A load of 200 N is applied to the frontal part for 1 minute. In order to pass the test the fork must resist without breakage or deformation. * Fatigue Test: During this test an alternate force of +-600 N is applied. In order to pass this test the fork must resist for 150,000 cycles without breaking. |
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(Rik O'Shea) wrote in message . com...
(Carl Fogel) wrote in message . com... Dear Rik, I think that the original question was whether these carbon Columbus Muscle Forks "break easily," not whether carbon forks in general last a long time as long as you don't break them in a crash. That is, what happens if you pop a pair of these Columbus Muscle Forks in a vise and whack 'em with a hammer to simulate a crash or wiggle 'em to mimic ordinary riding stresses? Do the Columbus forks bust more easily than other brands of carbon forks or any kind of metal forks? Like Dave, I appreciate your feedback, which suggests that carbon forks in general survive ordinary riding (but don't crash). That may be what Dave wanted to know, but he might have been wondering if these Columbus Muscles forks are the Ford Pinto of the carbon fork world, too thin, too fragile, or somehow badly designed. Carl Fogel The following is from http://www.framebuilding.com/carbon%20forks.htm although I dont specifically know how it compares to the testing performed on carbon forks from other manufactures. ASTM standards call for a load of 170 lbs. applied perpendicular to the steering axis, both pushing and pulling for 50,000 cycles without failure. The information below seems to suggest that the Columbus forks exceed this. -----------0--------- Columbus carbon forks are produced in accordance with ISO 9000. All forks are marked and their history can be traced. The tests include destruction testing and are performed on finished product samples. They are very seve * Frontal and side strength test: A load of 200 N is first applied to the frontal part and then to the side part of the fork. The flex is measured on each occasion and this must not exceed a set value. * Shock Test: A mass of 250 N is dropped from a height of 430mm on a properly restrained fork. In order to pass the test the fork must resist without breakage or residual deformation. * Static Test: A load of 200 N is applied to the frontal part for 1 minute. In order to pass the test the fork must resist without breakage or deformation. * Fatigue Test: During this test an alternate force of +-600 N is applied. In order to pass this test the fork must resist for 150,000 cycles without breaking. Dear Rik, The site that you found seems to be the Columbus Carbon parts web site: http://www.framebuilding.com/carbon%20forks.htm I found it fascinatinng. I'm ignorant about forks and materials, but I'm wary of what seems like confused marketing hype: "Carbon fibre as a material is 4 times more resistant than steel and 8 times more resistant than aluminium. Its versatility and directionality allows Columbus designers to modulate the section and form of the fork blades to satisfy all design criteria, without compromise or limitation. The Columbus composite fork blades have been realized by overlapping 15 layers of T-700 aerospace carbon fibre and then covering this externally with a layer of High Modulus Carbon fibre, which is 20% lighter and 10% more resistant than T-700. Additionally the full carbon fork, MUSCLE, also includes a special reticular fabric in titanium called 'Ti Mesh titanium net'. This has a considerable damping effect on high frequency vibrations within the fork, such as those produced by irregular ground surfaces. Super Muscle includes Kevlar and Nickel for improved weight saving while maintaining strength and shock resistance." What do they mean by "resistant"? Strength in compression? Why use 15 inner layers of inferior T-700 and only one outer layer of the good stuff, which is "20% lighter and 10% more resistant"? (It sounds as if they could use the good stuff and make a 10% stronger fork that would be 20% lighter.) Why does a carbon fork, often claimed to damp vibration better than metal, need a layer of metal mesh to damp vibrations? How does including Kevlar and nickel in the Super Muscle Fork save weight while maintaining strength? Isn't nickel a denser and weaker metal than the titanium used in the plain muscle fork? (The titanium in the plain Muscle Fork has roughly 8 times nickel's yield strength and 33% more tensile strength than nickel, a weaker metal that's twice as dense as titanium--8,800 kg/cubic-meter versus 4,500 kg/cubic-meter: http://www.simetric.co.uk/si_metals.htm This density site also lists manure at 400 kg/cubic meter, a figure that may apply to some of the Columbus site's explanations.) Apart from such technical mysteries, it still sounds as if we don't want to crash such forks, which was the consensus of the experts in your previous post. I've gathered elsewhere that severe carbon damage can be invisible to the naked eye, while metal tends to bend and reveal its impending failure. The ISO 9000 "shock test" mentioned on the site sounds as if a 670-pound weight is dropped 17 inches onto an upright fork. While surviving this thump sounds impressive, ordinary BMX and mountain bikes routinely drop 250 pounds onto the front and rear from considerably more than a foot and a half, so I'm not sure how well this simulates a fork-damaging crash, which typically involves the sideways force of ramming something. Like a leg-bone, a fork resists impacts from above that would easily break it from the side. Again, I do appreciate the effort that you put into finding this Columbus site, which certainly indicates that the Muscle fork and its big brother both pass the basic kinds of tests that I was wondering about and that might be what the original poster wanted to know--the ISO standard suggests that the Carbon Muscle fork meets detailed fork standards, so it ought to be fairly reliable, no matter what the marketing people are babbling. So thanks--it's awfully nice of you to cater to my curiosity by finding that site. Carl Fogel |
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Carl Fogel wrote:
snip Why does a carbon fork, often claimed to damp vibration better than metal, need a layer of metal mesh to damp vibrations? How does including Kevlar and nickel in the Super Muscle Fork save weight while maintaining strength? Isn't nickel a denser and weaker metal than the titanium used in the plain muscle fork? good questions! nickel alloys are not necessarily weak, often quite the reverse, but they are /cheaper/ than ti!!! to be honest, i have a hard time filtering out any tech from the marketing with that columbus blurb, but as i understand it, the reason composites are good for vibration is because the fibers are embedded in a polymer matrix. the modulus of the polymer is very low and for small deformation amplitudes, you're riding on polymer, not high modulus graphite. what a mesh would do is effectively provide a large volume of polymer between high density layers of graphite fibers and therefore provide a zone of "insulation" between different regions of the component. so, provided that "insulation" layer of polymer can be persuaded to remain intact at high load, and the mesh would hopefully have this effect as well as separation, then that could be the reason. but for the definitive answer, you'll need to ask someone with more composites experience than i. jb |
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jim beam wrote in message m...
Carl Fogel wrote: snip Why does a carbon fork, often claimed to damp vibration better than metal, need a layer of metal mesh to damp vibrations? How does including Kevlar and nickel in the Super Muscle Fork save weight while maintaining strength? Isn't nickel a denser and weaker metal than the titanium used in the plain muscle fork? good questions! nickel alloys are not necessarily weak, often quite the reverse, but they are /cheaper/ than ti!!! to be honest, i have a hard time filtering out any tech from the marketing with that columbus blurb, but as i understand it, the reason composites are good for vibration is because the fibers are embedded in a polymer matrix. the modulus of the polymer is very low and for small deformation amplitudes, you're riding on polymer, not high modulus graphite. what a mesh would do is effectively provide a large volume of polymer between high density layers of graphite fibers and therefore provide a zone of "insulation" between different regions of the component. so, provided that "insulation" layer of polymer can be persuaded to remain intact at high load, and the mesh would hopefully have this effect as well as separation, then that could be the reason. but for the definitive answer, you'll need to ask someone with more composites experience than i. jb Dear Jim, Most of that went over my head (not your fault, I have lots of clearance). But the Columbus site seems to say that they use cheaper nickel mesh (I found "carbon nickel" mentioned) to make the more expensive version of the fork--which somehow ends up being lighter than the cheaper titanium mesh version. cheaper plain muscle fork = titanium = 380 grams expensive super muscle fork = nickel-carbon = 340 grams I browsed a bit more and found this page describing the Super Muscle Fork further on the same site: http://www.framebuilding.com/what.htm "In the fork column, Columbus has inserted Kevlar layers, which through their ability to resist cuts and abrasions, reduce the risk of cuts caused by the clamps of the handlebar stem, which are particularly sharp." Again, I'm wary. Perhaps Kevlar resists cutting better than plain carbon fiber, but I seem recall reading that Kevlar is usually cut with ordinary scissors--its virtues do not include any great resistance to cuts. There must be some prices somewhere, but I didn't find any when I looked. Carl Fogel |
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Carl Fogel wrote:
But the Columbus site seems to say that they use cheaper nickel mesh (I found "carbon nickel" mentioned) to make the more expensive version of the fork--which somehow ends up being lighter than the cheaper titanium mesh version. cheaper plain muscle fork = titanium = 380 grams expensive super muscle fork = nickel-carbon = 340 grams just don't know. some nickel alloys are quite exotic & expensive, but those are usually for high temperature applications. don't know the specifics here, and honestly still can't tell you why nickel would be used. I browsed a bit more and found this page describing the Super Muscle Fork further on the same site: http://www.framebuilding.com/what.htm "In the fork column, Columbus has inserted Kevlar layers, which through their ability to resist cuts and abrasions, reduce the risk of cuts caused by the clamps of the handlebar stem, which are particularly sharp." Again, I'm wary. Perhaps Kevlar resists cutting better than plain carbon fiber, but I seem recall reading that Kevlar is usually cut with ordinary scissors--its virtues do not include any great resistance to cuts. as nicely stated here; http://plastics.about.com/library/weekly/aa050597.htm kevlar is used to protect carbon composites against catastrophic failure, but one of the only two failed carbon handlebars i've seen was woven with kevlar, so who knows how this is supposed to work in practice. while looking for that page, i got totally sidetracked by this: http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inventors/kwolek.htm do you have any tech-inclined daughters you want to inspire? jb |
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