A lot of those on the blog were extraordinary situations.. (although seatposts snapping could be due to repositioning.. on here the other day someone pointed out a manufacturer's components were designed to last a season.. is the same not true of CF? stress it in position once then expend it after a short period?)
Where steel wouldve bent, and maybe aluminium wouldve bent before cracking, carbon just gave up the ghost and snapped.
Maybe in the search for lightweight components they should give thought to dual materiels.. a thin steel tube would die a death under pressure, but if supported by a layer of CF, you'd maybe get a happy medium between the two.. lightness but with a resistance to snapping provided by the steel. Agreed it would still fail, but maybe with a saving few seconds to bail rather than be bailed... maybe.. admittedly it wont help too much with ultra weight saving, but when the perceived customer/consumer is not team based, not loaded with the money to replace components mid season prior to failure.. maybe it should be an option. Our Composite plates in our body armour get tested under xray for stress raisers and cracking.. I doubt the same is said for bike parts, although the practise maybe should be applied
I'll happily stick with Steel and Titanium..