Rapparee87
Retro Guru
Amateur Googling reveals that carbon fibre frames will degrade over time, much quicker than steel frames it seems, so after us steel men are gone retro will pass too!
I dunno, I've got a Vitus 7 tube carbon from 1985, so that makes it 40 years old today. Whatever I do to it, riding gravel, pothole cities, numerous offs, a head on collision, it just will not die.Amateur Googling reveals that carbon fibre frames will degrade over time, much quicker than steel frames it seems, so after us steel men are gone retro will pass too!
Steel frames lose their 'zing', ie their stiffness very quickly, after not much abuse. Eddy Merckx changed his frames every six weeks because they had 'lost their fight', nothing, no material I suppose lasts forever.
"After a year they get new bikes because they're full of scratches and dents, not because they've lost their stiffness. I have occasionally resprayed a frame, which was then used for another year. Never heard anything about it. Knetemann rode the bike he used to win the World Championship for a total of three years."
sounds like a sales ploy. and picture below. just sayin'. people replace bent tubes on bicycles all day longSix weeks? Perhaps that says more about Merkcx than about the steel frames.
Jan le Grand, who was responsible for the bikes of Peter Post's rather successful TI Raleigh team, said in an interview about the team bikes he had built:
To be fair to eddy and his builders though, if you were to work at the very limit of steel's capabilities, you could make a super lightweight frame where fatigue would be a (shorter-term) problem, so a design life of only a few thousand miles hard riding.A new custom frame built every six weeks will have affected Merckx's profit margin... Or that of his team. Sounds like a tall tale.