#16
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OP, could you post some photos of the Rival bikes? Don't even see that spec on the VAAST site.
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#17
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It looks like lots of marketing around Magnesium but somehow I am guessing this is mostly an aluminum alloy with a small amount of magnesium in it, but somehow different from the similar alloys used in the past and marketed as "Magnesium".
The price looks good IMO. Material is interesting. The bikes themselves are not that interesting to me personally I guess. I guess a good benchmark for the real world would be if Baron would share what size he rode and how much the built up bike weighed? We know all these materials can be made into nice bikes, but the market seems to move on how much the final product weights balanced out against aero I guess. |
#18
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Quote:
By "weldable" they mean it will melt at 1200 F instead of exploding, like Mg normally does. I am skeptical of most of the claims made by Vaast, but this actually does seem to be primarily Mg. The main use of Mg in the bike industry today is cast mountain bike fork lowers, but in that use case, there is no need for welding, and the Mg alloy has advantages in terms of casting, so these "super magnesium" properties aren't needed. |
#19
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I'm surprised no one has yet commented on this part of Baron Blubba's review of a magnesium bike. Worthy of The Onion, IMHO...
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#20
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As noted above, it appears that VAAST is using a mostly magnesium alloy. And they are not the first to make frames by welding magnesium tubing. Merida made magnesium frames for many years, and Pinarello also made magnesium frames for a bit. Probably one of the least apt usages of magnesium in the bicycle industry were the American Classic magnesium rims. These were very light (sub 300 grams for a clincher rim), but a quite fragile. Worse yet, they would start to fall apart without even riding them. The brack tracks were bare magnesium, and since magnesium corrodes easily, the brake tracks would corrode away easily just from exposure to the atmosphere.
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#21
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What does this even mean?
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#22
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Compared to other structural metals, magnesium is chemically quite reactive, and even flammable/explosive in some situations.
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#23
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Quote:
https://forums.thepaceline.net/showthread.php?t=309061 The weight for a size M (54ish) without pedals, cages, or mounts is 18 lbs 10 oz. Dgauthier, I am way too wholesome to fathom your depths. |
#24
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Quote:
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#25
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Quote:
__________________
Be the Reason Others Succeed |
#26
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Quote:
For those who don't know how much fun you can have with magnesium: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T3DK-jEWQg0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cSusDFuaAms As EB pointed out, the frame is welded, so in reality there's no chance this Mg alloy bike will wipe out a city block... Last edited by dgauthier; 08-07-2024 at 03:09 PM. |
#27
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Quote:
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#28
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#29
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Those Pinarello Dogma AK61 magnesium frames were very desirable back in the day. However, some developed cracks.
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#30
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Magnesium is flammable you know
Magnesium is a been there done that for the the industry. As others have alluded, they cracked. Like most of what was sold Last edited by peanutgallery; 08-08-2024 at 08:12 AM. |
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