Getting
Started - Buy it, Ride it, Race it!
Buying a Bike:
Frame Styles || Bicycle Sizing || Component
Variances
Racing Information:
1st Timers || What
to bring
So you are looking to get started in the sport of mountain biking, but you
do not know where to start, right? Your main concern is probably what type
of bike to buy and how much money you should be spending to walk away from
your LBS (local bike shop) with a high-quality bike. Mountain biking is
a sport/hobby that requires practice, research, and a bit of effort. Just
like any sport/hobby, it requires some time and money, however making sure
that your money is well spent is making sure you have the proper bike for
the job.
We have layed out a path that will help you pick out a bike, determine the
proper size, look for component variances, check for frame materials, and
lastly close the deal. Ok, let's get started!
Selecting a Frame
Ok, you walk into your LBS and becomed overwhelmed
by the different types of bikes they have to offer you. Looking around,
you may find that a few bikes have front shocks, others have front and rear
shocks, and the rest have no shocks at all. The bikes with the front and
rear shocks weigh a ton, however the ones without are feather light. In
determining what type of bike you need to look for, you have to ask yourself,
"What type of riding will I be doing?" Determining the frame material
of your bike should be of somewhat high concern being that certain materials
last longer and perform differently then others. For complete information
on frame materials, please refer to information below written by Sheldon
"Totally Tubular" Brown.
Frame Materials for the Cyclist
Stiffness,
Strength and Weight top
Strength and stiffness are different properties that are often confused
with one another. It is important to understand the difference, if you
want to understand differences in frame materials.
Imagine you clamp one end of a metal bar in a vise, and you hang a weight
on the free end, causing the bar to flex temporarily. When you remove
the weight, the bar snaps back to its original shape.
Different materials will flex different amounts for the
same amount of force applied. This is stiffness.
Now imagine hanging a heavier weight on the bar, so heavy
that it becomes premanently deformed. When you remove this weight, the
bar does not snap back all the way to its original shape, but remains
bent to some extent. When the metal changes shape permanently, it is said
to "yield."
Different materials can withstand different amounts of force
before yielding. This property is strength.
Stiffness
Stiffness affects the riding qualities of a bike frame, since a frame
suffers no permanent deformation in normal riding.
Stiffness is determined by a property of the material called "elastic
modulus" Elastic modulus is essentially independent of the quality
or alloying elements in a given metal. All kinds of steel, for instance
have basically the same elastic modulus.
Strength
Strength relates to the crash-worthiness or general durability of a frame,
but has no effect on the riding properties.
Strength is determined by a property of the material called "yield
strength."
Yield strength is very much affected by the quality, heat
treatment and alloying elements used in a particular brand/model of tubing.
Weight
In addition to the strength and stiffness, there's also the question of
how heavy a given volume of the material is. This is called "specific
gravity."
Like stiffness, the specific gravity of a given metal is not significantly
affected by the addition of different alloying elements. Although your
bike may have a sticker saying "Lite Steel (TM)," in fact, all
steel is equally heavy.
Here are some properties of the three common frame metals:
| Material |
Modulus |
Yield Point |
Specific Gravity |
| Aluminum |
10-11 |
11-59 (4-22 annealed.) |
168.5 |
| Steel |
30 |
46-162 |
490 |
| Titanium |
15-16.5 |
40-120 |
280 |
Note that the modulus (stiffness) and specific gravity (weight)
are pretty much independent of the quality, heat treatment, or alloying
agents of the materials. For instance, all steels, from the "gas-pipe"
used in department-store bikes to the exotic alloys used in multi-thousand
dollar bikes have a modulus of 30, and a specific gravity of 490.
Anybody that tells you that a particular brand of steel (or aluminum,
or titanium) is "lighter" or "stiffer" than another
brand or model is blowing smoke.
There are, however, real differences in yield strength among
different qualities of tubing.
This modulus value shows that if you were to build identical
frames from the 3 materials, using the same tubing diameters and wall
thicknesses, the aluminum frame would be only 1/3 as stiff as a steel
one, and the titanium frame only half as stiff.
The yield values show that the aluminum frame would be very
much weaker, in the sense of being more easily damaged than either the
steel or titanium frames.
The specific gravity values show that the aluminum frame
would only weigh 1/3 what the steel frame weighs, while the titanium frame
would be roughly half the weight of the steel one.
These generalities, however, are basically meaningless,
because you wouldn't build frames out of the three different metals to
the same tubing dimensions!
Real bicycles take the nature of the material into account
in selecting the diameter and wall-thickness of each piece of tubing that
goes to make up the frame. Stiffness is mainly related to the tubing diameter.
Strength is mainly related to the wall thickness, though diameter also
enters into it. Weight is affected both by diameter and wall thickness.
A frame manufacturer can make trade-offs by selecting different
tube diameters/wall thicknesses, allowing a frame to be made stiffer,
or stronger, or lighter.
Steel vs Titanium top
Look at the chart again. You'll see that identical steel vs titanium frames
would be about equal in strength, but that the titanium frame would be
about half the weight and half the stiffness.
Such a frame would likely have a whippy feel due to the reduced stiffness,
especially in loaded touring applications. To compensate, builders of
titanium frames use somewhat larger diameter tubes to bring the stiffness
more into line with what riders like. This tends to increase the weight
a bit, but by making the walls of the larger tubes a bit thinner, they
can compensate to some extent, and come up with a frame that is still
lighter than a normal steel frame.
Steel vs Aluminum
The situation with aluminum is even more pronounced. the "identical"
aluminum frame would be 1/3 as stiff as steel, roughly half as strong,
and 1/3 the weight. Such a frame would be quite unsatisfactory. That's
why aluminum frames generally have noticeably larger tubing diameters
and thicker-walled tubing. This generally results with frames of quite
adequate stiffness, still lighter than comparable steel ones.
Large diameter thin-wall tubing
The advantages of larger tubing diameter can, theoretically be applied
to steel construction, but there's a practical limit. You could build
a steel frame with 2 inch diameter tubing, and it would be stiffer than
anything available--indeed, stiffer than anybody needs. By making the
walls of the tubes thin enough, you could make it very, very light as
well.
Why don't manufacturers do this? Two reasons.
The thinner the walls of the tubing, the harder it is to
make a good joint. This is the reason for butted tubing, where the walls
get thicker near the ends, where the tubes come together with other tubes.
In addition, if the walls get too thin, the tubes become
too easy to dent, and connection points for bottle cages, cable stops,
shifter bosses and the like have inadequate support.
Stiffness and ride quality top
Frame stiffness (or the lack of it) doesn't have as
much effect on ride quality as many people would lead you to believe.
Let's look at it from a couple of different directions:
Torsional/lateral stiffness
This is mainly related to the stresses generated by the forces you create
from pedaling. Any frame will flex around the bottom bracket a bit in
response to pedaling loads. This flex can be felt, and many riders assume
that it is consuming (wasting) pedaling effort. Actually, that's not the
case, because the metals used in bicycle frames are very efficient springs,
and the energy gets returned at the end of the power stroke, so little
or nothing is actually lost. While there is no actual loss of efficiency
from a "flexy" frame, most cyclists find the sensation unpleasant,
and prefer a frame that is fairly stiff in the drive-train area. This
is more of a concern for larger, heavier riders, and for those who make
a habit of standing up to pedal.
Another area where lateral stiffness can be an issue particularly to the
touring cyclist is the rear triangle, when there's a touring load on the
rear rack. An frame that is too flexy in this area will feel "whippy"
and may be prone to dangerous oscillations at high speeds. Most of this
flex is usually in the luggage rack itself, but there can be enough flex
in the seat stays to aggravate this condition.
Vertical stiffness top
(Since this article deals with frames, the issue at
hand is road shock transmitted from the rear tire to the saddle. Ride
qualities experienced at the handlebars are to some extent determined
by the fork, as well as geometry, and flex in other bolt-on parts, but
are un-related to the choice of frame material.)
Much of the commonplace B.S. that is talked about different frame materials
relates to imagined differences in vertical stiffness. It will be said
that one frame has a comfy ride and absorbs road shocks, while another
is alleged to be harsh and make you feel every crack in the pavement.
Virtually all of these "differences" are either the imaginary
result of the placebo effect, or are caused by something other than the
frame material choice.
Bumps are transmitted from the rear tire patch, through
the tire, the wheel, the seatstays, the seatpost, the saddle frame, and
the saddle top. All these parts deflect to a greater or lesser extent
when you hit a bump, but not to an equal extent.
The greatest degree of flex is in the tire, probably the
second greatest is the saddle itself. If you have a lot of seatpost sticking
out of a small frame, there's noticeable flex in the seatpost. The shock
absorbent qualities of good quality wheels are negligible...and now we
get to the seat stays. The seat stays (the only part of this system that
is actually part of the frame) are loaded in pure, in-line compression.
In this direction, they are so stiff, even the lightest and thinnest ones,
that they can contribute nothing worth mentioning to shock absorbency.
The only place that frame flex can be reasonably supposed
to contribute anything at all to "suspension" is that, if you
have a long exposed seatpost that doesn't run too deep into the seat tube,
the bottom end of the seatpost may cause the top of the seat tube to bow
very slightly. Even this compliance is only a fraction of the flex of
the exposed length of the seatpost.
The frame feature that does have some effect on road shock
at the rump is the design of the rear triangle. This is one of the reasons
that touring bikes tend to have long chainstays--it puts the rider forward
of the rear wheel. Short chainstays give a harsh ride for the same reason
that you bounce more in the back of a bus than in the middle...if you're
right on top of the wheel, all of the jolt goes straight up.
Carbon Fiber top
Carbon fiber is an increasingly popular frame material, but it is fundamentally
different from metal tubing as a way to construct frames. Because of the
fibrous nature of this material, it has a much more pronounced "grain"
than metal does. A well-designed carbon fiber frame can have the fabric
aligned in such a way as to provide maximum strength in the directions
of maximum stress.
Unfortunately, in bicycle applications, carbon fiber is not a fully mature
technology, as tubular-construction metal frames are. Bicycles are subjected
to a very wide range of different stresses from many different directions.
Even with computer modeling, the loads can't be entirely predicted. Carbon
fiber has great potential, but contemporary carbon fiber frames have not
demonstrated the level of reliability and durability that are desired
for heavy-duty touring use. In particular, a weak point tends to be the
areas where metal fitments, such as fork ends, bottom bracket shells,
headsets, etc connect to the carbon frame. These areas can be weakened
by corrosion over time, and lead to failure.
In geometry, there's nothing as strong as a triangle. Diamond-frame
bikes consist basically of two triangles. The elegance and simplicity
of this design is very hard to improve upon. Billions of diamond-frame
bikes have been made from tubing for over a century, and during that time,
hundreds of thousands of very smart people have spent billions of hours
riding along and thinking about ways to fine-tune the performance of their
bikes. The tubular diamond frame has been fine tuned by an evolutionary
process to the point where it is very close to perfection, given the basic
design and materials. I often commute on a Mead Ranger frame built in
1916. It's a tad heavier than a more modern frame, but its general riding
qualities are as nice as any bike I own.
If there is to be any major improvement in frame design,
it must come either from a completely different type of construction process,
such as carbon fiber, or cast magnesium; or a completely different type
of design, such as a recumbent.
Serviceability top
Any of these materials is quite sutiable for short to medium touring in
industrialized countries. Titanium, while costly, is generally the most
durable material choice, but aluminum and steel are excellent. Nobody's
making carbon fiber touring bikes as far as I know, yet.
For extended travel in less-developed areas, steel is probably still the
best choice, because in the event of damage, repairs can be made by anybody
with a torch and brazing/welding know-how.
Bicycle Sizing >>
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