shovelon":1e1ubzho said:7005 alloy tubesets for 1991 was very highend stuff.
shovelon":1e1ubzho said:My guess that K2 dabbled in bikes shortly before they latched onto Proflex.
Would make that a very rare bird.
7005 is an Easton proprietary alloy developed for their baseball bats. Early 90's 7005 tubesets were very expensive, and still is here in the states. The Asians struck a deal with Easton but was not until mid to late 90's did 7005 frames come from Asia. From the look of the frame and considering the age, I still think it is high end.utahdog2003":2cg27z2l said:shovelon":2cg27z2l said:7005 alloy tubesets for 1991 was very highend stuff.
I would consider 7000series aluminum as imported mass production stock and not very highend. I think that sort of holds true today. More commonly, 6061 seems to indicate USA manufacture and 7005 Asian.
shovelon":2cg27z2l said:My guess that K2 dabbled in bikes shortly before they latched onto Proflex.
Would make that a very rare bird.
Never saw those in the states. Euro market only stuff maybe?
That gets me thinking. Easton is very aggresive in stopping unauthorized production of their proprietary alloy 7005, which is a high strength and weldable aluminum that requires a very long heat cycle to soften. That heat cycle is much longer than the weld cycle. Hence, no post weld heat treat is required, only stress relief during powdercoat baking.stumpjumper1990":3muvfcv4 said:The decal on the seattube says: 7000 series!
I don't know if it's 7005. Possibly something else?
shovelon":8v3kfa4i said:7005 is an Easton proprietary alloy developed for their baseball bats. Early 90's 7005 tubesets were very expensive, and still is here in the states. The Asians struck a deal with Easton but was not until mid to late 90's did 7005 frames come from Asia. From the look of the frame and considering the age, I still think it is high end.
I agree, maybe just Euro market.
shovelon":ljcgqjcg said:That gets me thinking. Easton is very aggresive in stopping unauthorized production of their proprietary alloy 7005, which is a high strength and weldable aluminum that requires a very long heat cycle to soften. That heat cycle is much longer than the weld cycle. Hence, no post weld heat treat is required, only stress relief during powdercoat baking.stumpjumper1990":ljcgqjcg said:The decal on the seattube says: 7000 series!
I don't know if it's 7005. Possibly something else?
Could be why K2 was test marketing in Europe, or Easton shut them down before long.