Anthony":1wah31uc said:
Carsten, could you explain something for me please? Everybody agrees that Klein frames were both very light and very stiff. Normally light and stiff is an either/or, not a both, so how did they achieve that?
Although the tubes were fat for their day, they weren't fat by today's standards and if the tube gauges were as thin as stated above then they were much thinner than today's, so how come the frames were so stiff?
gary wanted them to be stiff in the bottom bracket and head tube to achieve drive train and steering efficiency. the frames are not overly stiff in general. they are just not "noodely" like the typical steel or Ti frame. an aluminum frame shouldn't flex anyways for it to last.
also the MC1 era frames (until 1993) were not particularly light. Mountainklein, Pinnacle, Rascal, MC1 Attitude frames weigh 2000grams and more iirc. i think my medium MountainKlein frame with bottom bracket was 2300grams. Pinnacle and Rascal are not much lighter. only the MC1 Adroit frame is lighter with the thinner walled tubes and carbon/boron reinforcements. even back then there were lighter steel and Ti frames but they were much less "stiff".
a big step ahead in terms of weight were the Gradient tubes on the MC2 era bikes. the Pulse frame weighs 1500grams, 400-500 grams less than the Rascal which it kinda replaced. and even that is not overly light compared to current frames.
somewhere i have seen the wall thicknesses listed and they are far far away from a coke can.
that's just another half-knowledge over-simplification so typical for this board these days.
cheers, carsten