Raging_Bulls":23x4vmxb said:If the frame really had such an influence on the bike's speed, I wouldn't be referring to GTs as "mobile chicanes".
Every single time I encountered a GT, it was always in my way until I had the opportunity to overtake it.
A good rider can win championships on any decent bike. GT simply had the money to pay for the best riders, and that's all there is to it.
Theoretically a smaller triangle is stronger indeed, but there's another theory to keep in mind as well. The strongest triangle is one with three 60° corners. The more you deviate from that, the weaker it becomes.
The GT triangle needs a sharper corner near the dropouts than a normal bike does, which just about cancels the strength gained by reducing the triangle's size.
Your theory doesn't reflect in real life. I can hardly count cracked Zaskars over the years, they still going strong. That fact tells something about design strengths and engineering quality.
I can't tell the same thing about alu e-stays or x-shaped frames like S-Bikes for example.
I'm not saying it's the best design, many more bike innovations deserve more to be in top 10, GT wasn’t first with that idea but it was a good choice of frame design.
Of course if you pay for best riders, they will win gold for you.
Again, even if GT wouldn’t invest in marketing that doesn't change the fact those bikes are just good riders.
Genuine question, did you ever ridden a GT?Raging_Bulls":23x4vmxb said:As for the strength of the rear triangle : The difference is so minimal that it doesn't actually affect the ride or the feel at all.