I had to chuckle a little bit at the posting left by the original poster. I have been in this business for 14 years, visited (repeatedly) Merlin Metalworks (when they were in Cambridge), Seven Cycles, Serotta and Independent Fabrications. They charge a very fair price, even with the recent price increases.
The "assembly" process that a steel frame goes through is nothing compared to quality titanium frames.
First, let me say that the tubing these companies use comes from Haynes (which is certainly not cheap) or Reynolds. Those suppliers are capable of making tubes with consistent wall thickness, which is no small feat. Seven and the old Merlin used custom-butted tubes, which are butted externally. Serotta uses tubes that are tapered and swaged, which is also very expensive.
Seven, Merlin and Independent Fabrications use double-pass welds, rather than single-pass. This causes a HUGE increase in labor costs, but creates a much stronger, more even weld. This is the reason their welds also look so pretty and so even.
Seven and Merlin (I'm not sure about IF or Serotta) thread the BB shell after the frame is complete, rather than buying pre-threaded BB shells. This is also very expensive, but results in a straighter frame.
These are things no other company does, American or not. This is also the reason that these frames cost so much. I've been doing this a very long time and I've NEVER seen a broken Seven or a broken Merlin. I've seen a number of broken Litespeeds (usually at the welds) and "outsourced" frames.
Titanium is a very difficult material to handle because it is so easy to contaminate the tubes. The 4 guys I mentioned have to use cotton gloves to handle the tubes to make sure that the oil from their hands does not contaminate the weld, which usually causes failure.
I guess the bottom line is this...
If you want a titanium frame that has the properties of titanium (resilient, rust-proof) you can go with any manufacturer from anywhere.
If you want a frame that's pretty well made and has all the properties of a titanium frame then go with Sandvik/TST.
If you want a titanium frame that virtually indestructible and straight you have to go with one of these manufacturers.
By the way...
Raise your hand if you've ever seen a broken titanium Merlin (pre-litespeed), Seven, Independent of Serotta.
madjh":3ndt7wv5 said:
It’s funny, the 98% of all titanium comes from Russia and China. Airborne, Dean and many others use china or URSS TI. We pay for the job and for the design and research, that’s why in china are cheaper, because they made copies and the hand is cheaper, things that every body knows.
The ti is always the same, all companies use the grade 9 tubes, 94,5% ti, 3% Al and 2,5 vanadium, the famous 3al-2,5v There are others ti like the exclusive 6al4v
A ti tube set to built a frame cost 340$ an aluminium Columbus XLR8R cost 318,71$
and the most incredible, THE COLUMBUS XCR SS, a stainless
steel tube set cost 675$
A finished frame of ti cost two or tree times more than a steel frame, and you see how much money the tubes cost, independent from where the ti comes and how much money the companies invert in design etc.
If you don´t believe me or If you want to know more, Look at
http://www.novacycles.com/catalog/pr...oducts_id=1249
That’s is why I don’t understand some comments about a page like
http://www.amarobikes.com/ where you can find cheap ti components with they own design and they made what you want.
Yes I like Kent Eriksen and moots and Merlin or litespeed, but we pay 2000-3000 euros not only for the ti, we paid for design and the welders and of course for a good job, but the good steel is very expensive and you need a very good welder and only cost “1000 - 1500 “euros, for a frame of for example, the famous Reynolds 953.
Finally , my perfect titanium bike (I have the perfect Aluminium bike
) is a niota ti or sewanee with ti components, an american frame with some "cheap" components, escept the seat post that must be the beautiful kent eriksen.