alloy or steel frames

hoova
Posts
69
Joined
3/5/2012
Location
AU
6/19/2012 5:48am Edited Date/Time 6/20/2012 12:30pm
just wanted to know the pro's and cons of the two (basically whats better and why?)
|
Madmax31
Posts
2040
Joined
1/7/2009
Location
Cincinnati, OH US
Fantasy
128th
6/19/2012 6:47am
95% of people wouldn't know the difference.
newmann
Posts
24444
Joined
4/1/2008
Location
US
6/19/2012 6:52am
Madmax31 wrote:
95% of people wouldn't know the difference.
I beg to differ. I don't like aluminum. And I'm a spode. An old spode.
Xeno
Posts
3630
Joined
12/30/2010
Location
San Clemente, CA US
6/19/2012 6:53am
I assume you mean aluminum vs. steel. Alloy is a blend of any two or more metals- including steel.

Aluminum is better for 4-strokes. It can handle the torque and weight better.
Eywa
Posts
68
Joined
1/15/2010
Location
Pandora US
6/19/2012 6:55am
I have nearly every steel frame I have owned crack or break, never had this problem with aluminum but I heard it can happen.

The Shop

6/19/2012 6:57am
I can't stand working on the aluminum frame 4 strokes. There area you have to work within is reduced so much that it's a PITA! Couple that with the elimination of lead / ROHS makes carb removal a bitch...
Rooster
Posts
4430
Joined
4/1/2008
Location
Edmonton CA
6/19/2012 7:57am
Eywa wrote:
I have nearly every steel frame I have owned crack or break, never had this problem with aluminum but I heard it can happen.
My experience is the complete opposite. I've only ever cracked an aluminum frame. My steel framed bikes held up great.
Eywa
Posts
68
Joined
1/15/2010
Location
Pandora US
6/19/2012 8:10am
Eywa wrote:
I have nearly every steel frame I have owned crack or break, never had this problem with aluminum but I heard it can happen.
Rooster wrote:
My experience is the complete opposite. I've only ever cracked an aluminum frame. My steel framed bikes held up great.
How many frames and of what brand, that would be interesting to know.
newmann
Posts
24444
Joined
4/1/2008
Location
US
6/19/2012 8:16am
Ride an aluminum framed bicycle on the road and then hop on a chromoly, titanium or carbon fiber frame road bike. My wife had an aluminum Felt that would rattle your teeth loose in under a mile, let alone the hundred mile rides we did. Built this carbon one up for her and it made all the difference in the world. Fast and comfy.

Matt Fisher
Posts
3947
Joined
4/1/2008
Location
Visalia, CA US
Fantasy
1084th
6/19/2012 10:10am
newmann wrote:
Ride an aluminum framed bicycle on the road and then hop on a chromoly, titanium or carbon fiber frame road bike. My wife had an aluminum...
Ride an aluminum framed bicycle on the road and then hop on a chromoly, titanium or carbon fiber frame road bike. My wife had an aluminum Felt that would rattle your teeth loose in under a mile, let alone the hundred mile rides we did. Built this carbon one up for her and it made all the difference in the world. Fast and comfy.

Nice bike, what's with the T Mobile graphics?
dirthead1
Posts
1444
Joined
4/1/2008
Location
Southern, CA US
6/19/2012 10:38am
I only ride steel framed motorcycles now, but I prefer riding rough tracks and having forgiving handling.
Rooster
Posts
4430
Joined
4/1/2008
Location
Edmonton CA
6/19/2012 11:07am Edited Date/Time 6/19/2012 2:07pm
Eywa wrote:
I have nearly every steel frame I have owned crack or break, never had this problem with aluminum but I heard it can happen.
Rooster wrote:
My experience is the complete opposite. I've only ever cracked an aluminum frame. My steel framed bikes held up great.
Eywa wrote:
How many frames and of what brand, that would be interesting to know.
I have had steel framed Honda's, Kawasaki's and Suzuki's that I've never cracked a frame on.

I've cracked an aluminum Honda frame and a Suzuki. The suzuki was a GSXR though and if the frame didn't crack the way I wadded it up I would have been surprised. Everything was totalled except the engine.
newmann
Posts
24444
Joined
4/1/2008
Location
US
6/19/2012 11:17am
newmann wrote:
Ride an aluminum framed bicycle on the road and then hop on a chromoly, titanium or carbon fiber frame road bike. My wife had an aluminum...
Ride an aluminum framed bicycle on the road and then hop on a chromoly, titanium or carbon fiber frame road bike. My wife had an aluminum Felt that would rattle your teeth loose in under a mile, let alone the hundred mile rides we did. Built this carbon one up for her and it made all the difference in the world. Fast and comfy.

Nice bike, what's with the T Mobile graphics?
Wife needed an extra small Giant TCR and the only way it was available was as a frameset only. At the time they didn't offer the complete bike in XS. Was back around 04 and the womens Olympic Team was using Giants and sponsored by T-Mobile. Obviously, someone on the team was vertically challenged and they built the smaller frame and offered some of them for sale. Talk about get expensive quick, building a road bike from scratch. Lots of carbon and a little ti.
Eywa
Posts
68
Joined
1/15/2010
Location
Pandora US
6/19/2012 12:14pm
newmann wrote:
Ride an aluminum framed bicycle on the road and then hop on a chromoly, titanium or carbon fiber frame road bike. My wife had an aluminum...
Ride an aluminum framed bicycle on the road and then hop on a chromoly, titanium or carbon fiber frame road bike. My wife had an aluminum Felt that would rattle your teeth loose in under a mile, let alone the hundred mile rides we did. Built this carbon one up for her and it made all the difference in the world. Fast and comfy.

Yeah but pink is for girls. Smile
6/19/2012 12:25pm
I hate aluminum frames from my small experiences with them. Steel framed xr100, kx 125, kx 250f and kx 250. Never have liked the way aluminum feels. I'm at an age where I'm comfortable with what I have and don't want to spend the time adapting to something that I may never get used to or like. I don't need another variable going through my head when I crash trying to understand why it happened.
maru
Posts
24
Joined
12/3/2011
Location
Cave Creek, AZ US
6/19/2012 2:21pm
Aluminum is great for mass production, and the big 4 made it work, but the theory that it is an improvement over steel came from the marketing dept.
VRR7
Posts
793
Joined
6/1/2011
Location
ZA
6/19/2012 3:44pm
How many Steel Frames are running in MotogP ? Evolutions works by letting the runts die off !
mx5471
Posts
986
Joined
7/10/2008
Location
AL US
6/19/2012 4:04pm Edited Date/Time 6/19/2012 4:30pm
One of the big differences is how the frames flex when you ride them. It effects the how they handle on the track and in turns. The aluminum is pretty rigid, and doesn't flex much. The steel frames flex a lot more. RC said he preferred the old steel frames. When you ride them hard, in time they stress out, and break. It causes more stress on the frame in areas such as the steering neck gussets, and the down tubes where the engine mounts are. They'll crack at or above the top engine mounts. One actually broke completely in 2 in that area. That area receives a lot of stress. That's where ours all broke. You can weld them, but you're taking a chance, as they will break again next to the welds. That has happened to every Suzuki frame my son rode. He had '02 and '03 85's, and now an '08 RM250 that I just got a new frame for because of the same problem. For years in between, he rode Yamaha's, steel and aluminum. We never had a problem with either. He loves the '08 rm250. I had to go a long way to find one in '08. They sold out fast, but I found a dealer about 8 hours away that had 2. I wish I would have got both of them. But just about all, if not all of the new bikes have aluminum frames now.
Ing
Posts
3655
Joined
8/16/2006
Location
Spring Hill, FL US
6/19/2012 4:09pm
There is also a big difference between what the Japs use to put out (mild steel) compared to a quality chrome-moly frame.
6/19/2012 4:36pm Edited Date/Time 6/19/2012 4:37pm
Ing wrote:
There is also a big difference between what the Japs use to put out (mild steel) compared to a quality chrome-moly frame.
BMX has pushed forward so far in that department in previous years. Frames have gone from 8lb monsters that still cracked to 4lb featherweights with thinner tubing and an overall stronger build. A lot of that is thanks to their heat treating process'.Just imagine if they stayed with steel frames and cut their weight in half in MX... Blink
Matt Fisher
Posts
3947
Joined
4/1/2008
Location
Visalia, CA US
Fantasy
1084th
6/19/2012 5:20pm
VRR7 wrote:
How many Steel Frames are running in MotogP ? Evolutions works by letting the runts die off !
If the demands of MX were the same as the demands in MotoGP it would be tough to disagree with you.

MX has unique demands, as does MotoGP. The wheels alone are a huge clue there. Imagine using spoked wheels in a modern road race event, the flex would be horrible. Using cast wheels from a road race type machine would result in a big DNF from being shattered and the flat tires on a MX course.
VRR7
Posts
793
Joined
6/1/2011
Location
ZA
6/19/2012 10:58pm
How often must RD Replace his Frame V RV ?
dl117
Posts
1549
Joined
2/8/2007
Location
Cambridge, MN US
Fantasy
2546th
6/20/2012 6:30am
Ing wrote:
There is also a big difference between what the Japs use to put out (mild steel) compared to a quality chrome-moly frame.
BMX has pushed forward so far in that department in previous years. Frames have gone from 8lb monsters that still cracked to 4lb featherweights with thinner...
BMX has pushed forward so far in that department in previous years. Frames have gone from 8lb monsters that still cracked to 4lb featherweights with thinner tubing and an overall stronger build. A lot of that is thanks to their heat treating process'.Just imagine if they stayed with steel frames and cut their weight in half in MX... Blink
We as a family jsut got into BMX last fall and I noticed that they are far advanced in frame tech......some of the stuff at the track is crazy light. My sons bike is between 14 and 15lbs built up, his little 16" pit bike weights more than his race bike.
newmann
Posts
24444
Joined
4/1/2008
Location
US
6/20/2012 6:37am
Ing wrote:
There is also a big difference between what the Japs use to put out (mild steel) compared to a quality chrome-moly frame.
BMX has pushed forward so far in that department in previous years. Frames have gone from 8lb monsters that still cracked to 4lb featherweights with thinner...
BMX has pushed forward so far in that department in previous years. Frames have gone from 8lb monsters that still cracked to 4lb featherweights with thinner tubing and an overall stronger build. A lot of that is thanks to their heat treating process'.Just imagine if they stayed with steel frames and cut their weight in half in MX... Blink
dl117 wrote:
We as a family jsut got into BMX last fall and I noticed that they are far advanced in frame tech......some of the stuff at the...
We as a family jsut got into BMX last fall and I noticed that they are far advanced in frame tech......some of the stuff at the track is crazy light. My sons bike is between 14 and 15lbs built up, his little 16" pit bike weights more than his race bike.
Back in 1981, Blazer bicycles had 20 in. mini bmx bikes on the track weighing in the 7 1/2 lb. range. Chromoly frames too.
UpTiTe
Posts
7743
Joined
4/1/2008
Location
CA US
Fantasy
4000th
6/20/2012 7:02am
BMX has pushed forward so far in that department in previous years. Frames have gone from 8lb monsters that still cracked to 4lb featherweights with thinner...
BMX has pushed forward so far in that department in previous years. Frames have gone from 8lb monsters that still cracked to 4lb featherweights with thinner tubing and an overall stronger build. A lot of that is thanks to their heat treating process'.Just imagine if they stayed with steel frames and cut their weight in half in MX... Blink
dl117 wrote:
We as a family jsut got into BMX last fall and I noticed that they are far advanced in frame tech......some of the stuff at the...
We as a family jsut got into BMX last fall and I noticed that they are far advanced in frame tech......some of the stuff at the track is crazy light. My sons bike is between 14 and 15lbs built up, his little 16" pit bike weights more than his race bike.
newmann wrote:
Back in 1981, Blazer bicycles had 20 in. mini bmx bikes on the track weighing in the 7 1/2 lb. range. Chromoly frames too.
My daughters intense fully built tips the scale a shade over 11 lbs. Its a bad bike, of course having a factory ride doesn't hurt.
ns503
Posts
3986
Joined
4/1/2008
Location
NS Toolies CA
6/20/2012 7:02am
Aluminum holds gasses better. Just ask Mitch.
-eagle-
Posts
1604
Joined
5/9/2008
Location
ZW
6/20/2012 8:39am Edited Date/Time 6/20/2012 8:41am
This dude drops KNOWLEDGE on the topic.
Podcast

No surprise the bmx guys have this one dialed in as well. Beat me to the punch.
aluminum race bikes vs 4130 trail bikes is crazy.

Aluminum feels rigid while chromoly feels mushy to me.
Although 4 stroke aluminum frames feel less rigid than 2 stroke aluminum frames to me.
TbonesPop
Posts
3452
Joined
1/26/2010
Location
Gilbert, AZ US
Fantasy
360th
6/20/2012 12:30pm
Madmax31 wrote:
95% of people wouldn't know the difference.
^^This^^, except I'd say it's probably more like 98% of the riders out there wouldn't know the difference other than by looks (i.e. NOT the people on this website, obviously the folks on here are pretty die hard mototards). I think it really depends on what level of rider a person is. To the vast majority of riders, the main difference between aluminum and steel is the aluminum is easier for changing out the plastics and graphics while steel is painted a certain color and may rub off or not match a different color scheme (plastics and graphics) on the bike. People who ride a LOT (like most of the folks on here), will notice a difference in handling, rigidity, and rear wheel grip in certain kinds of track conditions - but those folks are pretty rare when looking at the total amount of folks that ride dirt bikes.

Post a reply to: alloy or steel frames

The Latest