(12-14-2012, 12:30 AM)painkiller Wrote: Thanks Rob, for now it is being recycled in the fluid trainer for the winter. Still a chance a bus may bust through wall and get me
I still have to try it out for the sake of trying. I am certainly not desperate for another bicycle really. If it has to stay in the trainer when I am done thats fine too. scrap it out for a $1.50, nope! It is better to fail and learn than to never have failed at all (builds character). I cannot go back to my engineers and tell them they are wrong,have you ever tried telling one they are smoked up?
I will utilize a pull tester that will determine exactly how much force per square inch it will take to breach the bond before I will proceed with the bonding of the headtube. I believe it will be in the 1500 lb. range or the aluminum will snap or tear before the bond breaches. It will not fail catastrophically if I can achieve that failure rate in a pull test of one square inch of bond. I will not assume anything until the test results and data taken has been analyzed for this specific application and analyzed again. that will determine how far I am willing to go on or not. We shall see but at least I will know with facts and data the possibility of saving and using a SaFE! frame that other wise has met its demise.
Holy cow, man. Are you and Nigel (nfmisso) related? Why do I get the feeling I'm about to step in poop, here?
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Engineering is a very cool and needed field of expertise but it is often reprimanded by Real World Results. Remember the Edsel? Just ugly. Okay - that was the Design / Marketing Group but, ain't many still on the road.
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The 'test' that you intend to run on that headtube is not unfamiliar to me. You may as well put it through a Rockwell hardness test while you're screwing around. None of that "science" will amount to a hill of beans if the frame is subjected to a SUDDEN, sharp, off-camber landing by an aggressive MTB'r trying to save skin. That's probably what caused the fracture to begin with. We all know that a repair is seldom stronger than the original build.
Ride it on the Trainer and enjoy the scenery. Don't forget the heavy-duty zip-tie.
That frame, Bob, is NOT dirt worthy and I would hate to see it get into unsuspecting hands. It is your duty, as a promoter of the cycling lifestyle, to ensure that only reliable equipment escapes your shop, brother. $1.50? Say what??
Now that I have chastized you and embarrased us both in front of our peers - I think that the quote that you were searching for was...
"Try not. Do. Or do not." Jedi Master Yoda.
Merry Crashmas.
Rob
Wheelies don't pop themselves. (from a QBP fortune cookie)